Palo Alto Weekly 10.05.2012 - Section 1

Palo Alto Weekly 10.05.2012 - Section 1

Section 1 of the October 5, 2012 edition of the Palo Alto Weekly

PaloAltoOnline.com
Vol. XXXIV, Number 1 N October 5, 2012
AN ALMANAC, MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE AND PALO ALTO WEEKLY PUBLICATION
HOME+GARDEN
FALL 2012
IN TOUCH WITH THE NEIGHBORHOOD IN MENLO PARK | PAGE 4 FROM EYESORE TO BEST ON BLOCK IN MOUNTAIN VIEW | PAGE 12
Inside:
MORE ROOM FOR BOOKS IN PALO ALTO | PAGE 18
Fall Home & Garden Design
IN PALO ALTO | PAGE 24
PROGRAM INSIDE:
United Nations Film Festival
News 3 Transitions 15 Spectrum 16 Eating Out 28 ShopTalk 29 Movies 30 Puzzles 70
Page 24 Page 32
NArts Human dignity: films that are timely, global NSports Stanford homecoming on an unbeatable day
NHome What does it take to be a net-zero energy home? Page 37
GREEN BUSINESS LEADERS
THE CITY OF PALO ALTO wishes to congratulate the following companies on receiving the 2012 Mayor's Green Business Leader Award. The high energy efficiency scores of their buildings make these companies true green leaders in our community. Everyone in Palo Alto benefits when our businesses take steps to improve the environment. Thank you, Green Business Leaders!
International School of the Peninsula
151 Laura Lane
Palo Alto Office Center
525 University Avenue
Palo Alto Unified School District
3412 Hillview Avenue
SAP Labs
Stanford Real Estate
3210 Porter Drive
Stevens Development Company
101 University, 444 High and 125 University Avenue
Tasso Street Building
435 Tasso Street
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati P.C.
601 California and 650 Page Mill Road
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Upfront
Neighbors devising crime-fighting strategies
Local news, information and analysis
Residents fight burglaries with lights, cameras, action
M
by Sue Dremann any Palo Alto neighbor- perhaps even catch the thieves, who hoods are organizing in have made off with tens of thouways they have not since sands of dollars in jewelry, cash and the rise of Neighborhood Watch electronics since late last year. programs in the 1980s, following a Email lists from Crescent Park to string of home burglaries that have Barron Park are crackling with the plagued the city. latest news about suspicious vehiFrom surveillance cameras to cles cruising residential streets. Last neighborhood-warning signs, resi- week, concerned north Palo Alto dents are strategizing to deter and residents discussed a white van seen
on their streets and gave information about it, complete with license number, to the Palo Alto police. Neighbors' increasing vigilance might help nab thieves like the ones who on Sept. 24 pilfered UPS parcels from a Crescent Park front porch within 30 seconds of the delivery. The resident, who asked that her name and home information not be made public, has shared images from her surveillance video with her neighbors and with police, she said.
Others are following suit. Annette Glanckopf of the Midtown Residents Association said many people in her neighborhood are installing cameras. The victim of the UPS-package theft said she initially installed the home cameras to act as a deterrent to would-be robbers. "But these kids were very brazen, or maybe too stupid, to see the cameras pointing everywhere," she said.
Though the police were unable to apprehend the thieves in her case, she shared the data from the cameras with officers, she said. "The surveillance helped. ... We could see what happened during every moment after the UPS truck left," she said. She believes the installation of additional cameras in her neighborhood will be key to the crime(continued on page 7)
EDUCATION
Counseling group seeks common ground
Gunn `guidance advisory committee' aims for reform consensus by February
by Chris fter more than a year of public divisiveness over Gunn High School's guidance-counseling system, 18 people representing divergent views sat down this week in search of common ground. With help from a professional facilitator, the Gunn Guidance Advisory Committee met for most of the day Tuesday, Oct. 2, and will gather at least six more times to meet a February 2013 deadline for recommending reforms to the Board of Education. Formation of the advisory committee -- which includes Gunn parents, teachers, students, counselors and administrators -- follows sharp criticism of Gunn's current counseling system from the parent group We Can Do Better Palo Alto. Citing polls showing higher satisfaction levels with counseling at Palo Alto High School than at Gunn, the group has lobbied the school board for more than a year to instruct Gunn to switch by this fall from its traditional counseling model to Palo Alto High School's "teacher-advisory" model. Under that model, Paly uses about 46 "teacher-advisers" to augment its small counseling staff, and students meet regularly in advisory groups. By contrast, Gunn employs seven guidance counselors to handle academic advising, college and career counseling and student social-emotional health, generally on an appointment basis. School board members, who identified shortcomings in both schools' counseling programs in the district's 2008 strategic plan, said they prefer to let Gunn arrive at its own counseling reform so long as it meets certain standards. The standards include more adult "touch points" for students. Though most public discussion
A
Cool it!
Emma Siskens, 10, plunges into the pool while friend Mikey Seybold, 11, swims to the other side while playing at the Greenmeadow neighborhood pool in Palo Alto on a very hot Oct. 3. The pool, open to members of the Greenmeadow Community Association, closes for the season on Oct. 31.
EDUCATION
Students report better mental health
Palo Alto officials concerned about substance abuse, though
alo Alto youth are emotionally healthier than they were two years ago, according to newly released data from the California Healthy Kids Survey. The percentage of ninth- and 11th-graders who said they had seriously considered suicide in the past 12 months dropped from 18 percent to 11 percent. Percentages also dropped for ninth- and 11thgraders who reported feeling "so sad and hopeless" for at least two weeks that they stopped doing some of their usual activities. The survey, given statewide every two years, measures risk and resiliency factors for seventh-, ninth- and 11th-graders. "Some of the measures that we as a community have been most fo-
P
by Chris Kenrick cused on, like suicide ideation and student depression, are heading in the right direction," Superintendent Kevin Skelly said Thursday. However, "the data also support the need for continued, concerted efforts across the PAUSD community to address student health and wellness needs," school district staff members said in a report. For example, the percentage of seventh-graders who reported feeling "sad and hopeless" went up from 17 percent in 2009-10 to 19 percent in 2011-12, the report said. Skelly will present major points of the survey to the Board of Education Tuesday, Oct. 9, and has posted the full survey online at http://pausd. org/parents/programs/studentconnectedness/index.shtml.
The school district and community took a host of initiatives to boost student social-emotional health and school "connectedness" following a string of Palo Alto student deaths by suicide in 2009 and 2010. The district adopted a studentwellness framework known as the Developmental Assets, which aims to promote and measure behaviors associated with youth resilience and thriving. Community agencies, with leadership from the school district and the city recreation department, created a coalition known as Project Safety Net, which continues to meet monthly to report on initiatives concerning youth well-being.
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Kenrick has focused on the need for change at Gunn, Paly Principal Phil Winston said Wednesday he also is implementing a formal plan to address weaknesses in Paly's counseling system. Winston and Gunn Principal Katya Villalobos are both due to deliver progress reports to the board next Tuesday, Oct. 9. In this past Tuesday's all-day meeting at the Elk's Club, facilitator Ken Yale, a former high school principal and social studies teacher, guided the group through get-acquainted and consensus-building exercises. Committee members shared their own memories of high school counseling and later were asked to write down and share what should be true for all students in an ideal counseling system for Gunn, regardless of the method. Members cited features like support for every child, regardless of whether the student seeks it out; attention to social-emotional health as well as academic and college advising; availability of trusted adults; easy access to adults; a program to help students make the transition from middle school to high school; multiple "touch points"; and the idea that students should feel at home in school. "When we talk about the outcome -- what we want to be true for students -- I'm not hearing a whole lot of difference," Yale said. "We might have all kinds of differences about policy, which particular model, which particular approach, but it's important to appreciate the fact that we all want the same things for the kids, by and large." A binder provided to each committee member included school dis(continued on page 8)
Veronica Weber
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REAL ESTATE TRENDS
by Samia Cullen
Upfront
Does Home Staging Pay Off?
In our fast moving market, every so often a seller will ask me if it's necessary to stage their home and whether staging pays off. In my opinion home staging is a must in any market. Making an inviting first impression is critical; when a house is professionally staged it will sell faster and at a higher price. A professional home stager will design and stage a home to optimize the available floor space, and to appeal to the broadest segment of the potential buyer pool. Professional staging helps create a setting that emotionally speaks to and connects with home buyers. All buying decisions involve emotions, and emotions are best evoked with a personal experience when touring the house, when buyers start feeling it as their home. Nowadays 95% of buyers look online to find their homes, and online home presentations containing photos and virtual tours are viewed three times more than those without. Staging helps produce beautiful photos and a memorable professional video tour of the home, bringing more buyers to your home�and more buyers can lead to a higher sale price. Given its effectiveness, staging is an integral part of my marketing strategy. My conviction of the importance of staging has led me to provide staging as a complimentary service to clients who list their homes with me. No matter what real estate market you are in, home staging is a wise move to get the best return when selling your home.
PUBLISHER William S. Johnson EDITORIAL Jocelyn Dong, Editor Carol Blitzer, Associate Editor Keith Peters, Sports Editor Tyler Hanley, ExpressTM and Online Editor Rebecca Wallace, Arts & Entertainment Editor Rick Eymer, Assistant Sports Editor Tom Gibboney, Spectrum Editor Sue Dremann, Chris Kenrick, Gennady Sheyner, Staff Writers Eric Van Susteren, Editorial Assistant, Internship Coordinator Veronica Weber, Staff Photographer Colin Becht, Dale F. Bentson, Peter Canavese, Kit Davey, Iris Harrell, Sheila Himmel, Chad Jones, Karla Kane, Kevin Kirby, Jack McKinnon, Jeanie K. Smith, Susan Tavernetti, Contributors DESIGN Shannon Corey, Design Director Linda Atilano, Diane Haas, Scott Peterson, Paul Llewellyn, Senior Designers Lili Cao, Rosanna Leung, Designer PRODUCTION Jennifer Lindberg, Production Manager Dorothy Hassett, Blanca Yoc, Sales & Production Coordinators ADVERTISING Tom Zahiralis, Vice President Sales & Advertising Samantha Mejia, Shop Product Manager Adam Carter, Elaine Clark, Janice Hoogner, Wendy Suzuki, Display Advertising Sales Neal Fine, Carolyn Oliver, Rosemary Lewkowitz, Real Estate Advertising Sales David Cirner, Irene Schwartz, Inside Advertising Sales Diane Martin, Real Estate Advertising Asst. Alicia Santillan, Classified Administrative Asst. EXPRESS, ONLINE AND VIDEO SERVICES Rachel Palmer, Online Operations Coordinator BUSINESS Susie Ochoa, Payroll & Benefits Elena Dineva, Mary McDonald, Claire McGibeny, Cathy Stringari, Business Associates ADMINISTRATION Doris Taylor, Receptionist Ruben Espinoza, Courier EMBARCADERO MEDIA William S. Johnson, President Michael I. Naar, Vice President & CFO Tom Zahiralis, Vice President Sales & Advertising Frank A. Bravo, Director, Information Technology & Webmaster Connie Jo Cotton, Major Accounts Sales Manager Bob Lampkin, Director, Circulation & Mailing Services Alicia Santillan, Circulation Assistant Chris Planessi, Chip Poedjosoedarmo, Computer System Associates The Palo Alto Weekly (ISSN 0199-1159) is published every Friday by Embarcadero Media, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94306, (650) 326-8210. Periodicals postage paid at Palo Alto, CA and additional mailing offices. Adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation for Santa Clara County. The Palo Alto Weekly is delivered free to homes in Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley, East Palo Alto, to faculty and staff households on the Stanford campus and to portions of Los Altos Hills. If you are not currently receiving the paper, you may request free delivery by calling 326-8210. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Palo Alto Weekly, P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302. Copyright �2012 by Embarcadero Media. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. The Palo Alto Weekly is available on the Internet via Palo Alto Online at: www.PaloAltoOnline.com Our email addresses are: editor@paweekly.com, letters@paweekly.com, digitalads@paweekly.com. Missed delivery or start/stop your paper? Call 650 326-8210, or email circulation@paweekly. com. You may also subscribe online at www.PaloAltoOnline.com. Subscriptions are $60/yr.
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I offer complimentary staging when I list your home. Contact me at Alain Pinel Realtors (650) 384-5392 or send me and email at scullen@apr.com. To learn more, log on to www.samiacullen.com.
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QUOTE OF THE WEEK
It was like losing a family member.
-- Chris Sigler, owner of the house where a centuries-old, damaged oak tree was removed this week. See story on page 5.
Around Town
Step." What colleges crave -- more than grades, test scores or anything else -- is authenticity in an applicant, said VanDeVelde, whose book is based on interviews with more than 50 admissions deans. "The perfect candidate may be somebody who's imperfect but authentic," she said. To parents, she advised going on the "college diet." "Stop talking nervously over dinner about college -- the subject should not be on the menu more than twice a week." PICK ME! PICK ME! ... Anyone concerned about declining civic engagement in Palo Alto would find plenty of reasons to smile at this week's meeting of the Parks and Recreation Commission. The commission may not be as wonky as the Planning and Transportation Commission or as detail-oriented as the Architectural Review Board, but for sheer gung-ho and enthusiasm, this seven-member group is tough to beat. This quality was on display Tuesday night when the commission was charged with appointing a three-member subcommittee to help staff put together the Parks and Recreation Master Plan, a colossal effort that is still in the embryo phase. Rob de Geus, a manager in the Parks and Recreation Department, called the forthcoming plan a "game changer for the department and the city." In this case, the commission's enthusiasm worked against it as five out of seven members threw their hat into the race. Things even got a bit heated when Commissioner Deirdre Crommie started arguing why she, and not former commission Chair Pat Markevitch, should be one of the three members on the subcommittee. She said Markevitch already had her chance to serve on a highly visible panel -- the Infrastructure Blue Ribbon Commission -- and complained that Markevitch didn't update her Parks and Recreation colleagues as often as she should have on that commission's progress. "Pat's gotten to do her piece already and we need someone new," Crommie said. Commissioners Stacey Ashlund, Jennifer Hetterly and Chair Ed Lauing also expressed their desire to serve on the subcommittee (the only two people who didn't volunteer -- Paul Losch and Daria Walsh -- plan to step down soon, when their terms expire). In the end, the glut of enthusiasm killed the nomination process and the commission voted to table the item and return to the topic later this month. N
SKY'S THE LIMIT ... How high is too high? That is the central question these days for Palo Alto officials awash in building proposals. Normally, the city's 50-foot height limit -- a long-standing sacred cow of local zoning regulations -- offers a simple answer to this question. But with developers looking to place four giant office towers at 27 University Ave. and two huge office buildings on Page Mill Road, these aren't normal times. Faced with these proposals, a hot real estate market and heavy demand for affordable housing, city officials are now considering ways to loosen the height limit and encourage more growth. The Architectural Review Board tackled this subject Thursday morning, with several members expressing support for allowing exceptions to the 50-foot height limit or, as one member suggested, scrapping it entirely. Most board members were open to taller buildings, particularly in downtown and along El Camino Real. "I'm really in favor of us trying to find a different way to manage this and to create opportunities for different heights, where mass and scale can be balanced appropriately in recognition of neighborhood concerns," said board member Randy Popp, who works downtown. But any solution, he said, should carefully consider the parking impacts of the taller buildings. Board member Alex Lew said there are plenty of examples of seven-to-10 -story buildings in neighboring communities and advocated surveying other areas for examples that work well in downtown locations. Board member Clare Malone Prichard was particularly enthusiastic about changing the height regulations. "I'm of a mind to not have a height limit anymore," she said, noting that the city's density regulations already limit building sizes. But she acknowledged that making the change would be a tall task. "There's a big fear in this town of tall buildings so that's not going to fly," she said. SEX, DRUGS AND COLLEGE ADMISSION ... These are the three subjects parents will travel through rain, snow, sleet and the dead of night to talk about, author Christine VanDeVelde joked to a packed audience of parents and students at Palo Alto High School Monday night. VanDeVelde is co-author with former Stanford admissions dean Robin Mamlet of the 2011 book "College Admissions: From Application to Acceptance, Step by
Upfront
COMMUNITY
On Sunday, a bicycle fest, for the average resident
In final Mayor's Challenge, Yiaway Yeh hopes people will get to know neighbors by hopping on their bikes
by Jocelyn Dong
T
here's been pingpong, bocce ball, yoga and tennis. And now, the latest event to spur Palo Altans to meet their neighbors: bike riding. Earlier this year, Mayor Yiaway Yeh launched a series of recreational events as a way to bring neighbors together. Called the Mayor's Challenge, it aimed to give residents new and old a venue for spending time together and getting to know each other. Yeh's final installment of the Challenge will take place Sunday afternoon, Oct. 7, with Bike Palo Alto. "Biking is a really tried-and-true Palo Alto activity," Yeh said this week, which also happens to be Walk & Roll Week for schools. Bike Palo Alto, based at El Carmelo Elementary School and hosted by the residential Palo Alto Neigh-
If you're going...
What: Bike Palo Alto! Where: El Carmelo Elementary School, corner of Bryant Street and Loma Verde Avenue When: Sunday, Oct. 7, 1 to 4 p.m. Cost: Free Info: www.pagreenteams.org/ bikepaloalto
borhoods Green Teams, celebrates all things bicycling. Participants will choose from three bike routes that lead to landmarks around town, including the Baylands. Each route will include rest stops featuring free treats, such as frozen yogurt, lemonade and fruit, according to coorganizer Lisa Altieri. Activities at El Carmelo will include a bike-themed obstacle course, free bike maintenance, free helmet fitting, tips on safe biking, a raffle and a "concierge" who can help people map safe bike routes to city destinations. Organizers said the purpose of Bike Palo Alto is to make it easier for people to ride their bikes around the city by introducing them to routes and equipping them to ride safely. To encourage neighborhood participation in the event, four City Council members -- Yeh, Vice Mayor Greg Scharff, Nancy Shepherd and Pat Burt -- will each lead a group of bicyclers from their respective neighborhoods to El Carmelo at 12:30 p.m. "That affirms our identity of coming from our neighborhoods to engage in a pastime in Palo Alto," Yeh said. Altieri herself became something
of a bicycle convert due to Bike Palo Alto, which is now in its third year. "I am the perfect example. I never biked," she said. Concerned for her safety, she didn't want to ride along busy El Camino Real from her home in Barron Park. "It was great for me, the first year. I learned that you don't have to get on El Camino Real. There are routes that are safe. So for me as a novice biker, I felt comfortable," she said. As an environmentalist, she said she's particularly enthusiastic about seeing more residents bicycle. Thirty-six percent of the city's greenhouse gas emissions are produced by cars, according to the Palo Alto Climate Protection Plan. The large majority of those car trips -- 83 percent -- are not commuters getting to work but residents going to the grocery store or other places in town, the report noted. "The goal is to get people to bike more often," Altieri said of Bike Palo Alto. "Driving is the largest impact we have on our carbon footprint in Palo Alto." With Sunday's bike fest ending the Mayor's Challenge, Yeh said the year-long effort has been instructive in how to build community. The first event, in which people played
VIDEO: A conversation with Angela Filo
Angela Buenning Filo, Palo Alto-based photographer and creator of the "Palo Alto Forest Project," speaks with Lisa Van Dusen about her photo installation, part of the Palo Alto Art Center's grand reopening -- "Community Creates" -- opening on Saturday, Oct. 6. Watch the video by on www. PaloAltoOnline.com. pingpong in five locations around town, showed residents "it's enjoyable to be able to come together for a fun activity," he said. And yet, he added, meeting one's neighbors at the spread-out locations proved to be a bit "happenstance." The second event, in which people did yoga, bocce ball or tennis in two city parks, consolidated the locations and brought people out to the parks. But getting people to try all three events proved challenging, Yeh said. Bike Palo Alto will hopefully incorporate the lessons of the first two, with one sport and one location, but fostering neighborliness by having residents ride to El Carmelo together. Moving forward from the Mayor's Challenge, Yeh and Scharff earlier this week received the City Council approval for another community-building idea, the Neighborhood Grants. Under that initiative, people who want to host a neighbor event or program -- such as a speaker or a sports day at a neighborhood park -- can apply for a micro-grant to fund the activity. A total of $25,000 a year will be available. "Some of it is intended to focus on new and innovative ways" of bringing both recent and longstanding residents together, Yeh said. "The lesson I learned in the Peace Corps was that it's best for people to act on their own ideas," Yeh said. N Editor Jocelyn Dong can be emailed at jdong@paweekly.com.
URBAN FOREST
High Street neighbors recall cut-down oak
Palo Alto valley oak was a century or two old
by Pierre Bienaim� n Anne and Chris Sigler's front yard on High Street stands a barren oak tree, cut down to four great but stunted branches shooting out of a thick trunk. Two weeks ago it was much more: a 50-ton valley oak, a member of a species (Quercus lobata) identified as so important to Palo Alto that it was granted protection by a city ordinance in 1996. But when its owners noticed a deep crack in the tree's house-facing side, coupled with a heavy lean toward a neighbor's property, emergency measures were taken to dismantle it. The Davey Tree Expert Company has been working at removal for nearly two weeks, six hours a day. Chris Sigler is an Oregon native, a place he said has "lots of tree-huggers." "It was glorious," he said of the oak. "It was what made this house. I made it the centerpiece of my property." When Sigler, owner of a construction-management consulting business, expanded his home a few years ago, he made sure to seek out and protect the tree's roots. "It was the crown jewel of my home and my neighborhood. I brought the doctor (city arborist Dave Dockter) over more often than I went to the doctor. He hugged that tree with me for years. It was like losing a family member."
I
Section 4 of Palo Alto's Tree Technical Manual states trees that display partial or clearly imminent failure while threatening persons or property may be removed without the city's review or approval. As it happened, two arborists familiar with the tree -- John McClenahan and Dockter -- did review its case. They both agreed that removal could not be avoided. According to Dockter, who prepared the manual, emergency removal "only happens once or twice a year," if that. Dave Schellinger, whose great-grandfather built the house in the 1920s, said he "grew up under the tree's auspices." He now lives next door. "For us in the neighborhood the presence of the oak tree will be very much missed," Schellinger said. The neighborhood's other residents echo the sentiment. "It was a grand old tree, and it's sad to see it go, but there were safety issues involved," said one local who preferred not to be named. The tree had been visible from her yard some houses away. Across the street, Lee Mitchell said he hopes that a cross section of the oak be preserved at the city's Junior Museum & Zoo on Middlefield Road.
Courtesy of Dexter Girton
Crews removed a centuries-old oak tree, which had a deep crack and was leaning dangerously toward a neighboring property, from in front of a home on High Street near Embarcadero Road in Palo Alto on Oct. 1. "It would be pretty cool. Kids could count out the age rings and everything," he said. Dexter Girton has been living next door to the oak tree since he bought his home in 1974. Should the oak have fallen, it was his house and garage that would have suffered potentially disastrous damage. The land all around his home hosts numerous fruit trees, many of which have benefited from composting of the oak's fallen leaves. "It looked pretty. People who visited really liked it," the retired electrical engineer said. "But I worried it would fall sometime, especially when I worked in the garage. It was definitely a hazard for the safety of the house. Anyone looking at the tree knew that." Last December another century-old tree had to be removed near the intersection of
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Upfront
ELECTION
Forum on state propositions set for Oct. 8
Wealth of local political forums scheduled as Nov. 6 election looms
forum on the pros and cons of all the state propositions will be held Monday, Oct. 8, at 2 p.m. at Avenidas, 450 Bryant St., Palo Alto. The forum is sponsored by the League of Women Voters Palo Alto. Civic groups will be hosting a variety of voter-education forums in the coming weeks, providing the electorate with opportunities to learn more about the people and issues they will be voting on Nov. 6. Here are some other upcoming events: Palo Alto Unified School District Board of Education s -ONDAY /CT PM AT Churchill Ave., Palo Alto. The forum will focus on special education. Sponsored by the Community Advisory Committee for Special Education. s7EDNESDAY/CTPMAT the English Resource Center (ERC) adjacent to the Palo Alto High School Library. Cosponsored by Paly's Student Equity Action Network, Parents Advocating Student Success and Paly alumni.
A
s-ONDAY/CTATPMIN the boardroom of school district headquarters, 25 Churchill, sponsored by the Palo Alto Weekly and moderated by California Sen. Joe Simitian, a former Palo Alto school board member. s 3UNDAY /CT AT PM AT Congregation Etz Chayim, 4161 Alma St. s7EDNESDAY/CTATPM at Nixon Elementary School, 1711 Stanford Ave., sponsored by the PTAs of Nixon and Escondido elementary schools. Pros and Cons forum covering all state propositions s4UESDAY/CT
PMAT 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Sponsored by the Junior League of Palo Alto-Mid-peninsula. s7EDNESDAY/CTPMAT 850 Webster St., Palo Alto. Santa Clara County Board of Education: Trustee Area No. 1 s7EDNESDAY/CT
PM at 1701 Rock Ave., Mountain View. Trustee Area No. 1 encompasses
Palo Alto, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, Mountain View and Sunnyvale per the new boundaries created by the 2010 census. Sponsored by League of Women Voters Los Altos/Mountain View and Crittenden Middle School PTA. Co-sponsored by League of Women Voters Palo Alto and League of Women Voters Cupertino-Sunnyvale. Palo Alto City Council s4HURSDAY/CT
PM at 250 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto. Sponsored by the League of Women Voters Palo Alto. State Assembly and State Senate s 7EDNESDAY /CT
PM at 701 Laurel St., Menlo Park. Cosponsored with League of Women Voters South San Mateo County. Election Day: presidential, state legislature and county final elections s4UESDAY.OVAM
PM More information is available at www.smartvoter.org. N -- Palo Alto Online staff
Health
(continued from page 3)
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ABAG is demanding Palo Alto zone for housing for 18,000 new residents. I challenged ABAG's demographic projections. The livability of our community depends upon strong leadership on this issue.
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www.gregschmid.com
Paid for by Greg Schmid for City Council 2012 -77*
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School principals initiated efforts on each campus to identify at-risk students, and a variety of peer support programs such as "Sources of Strength" and "Henry M. Gunn Gives Me Hope" took hold. The California Healthy Kids Survey describes itself as "the largest statewide survey of resiliency, protective factors and risk behaviors in the nation." Local officials called it a reliable measure for making statewide comparisons and longitudinal assessments of student health. In the survey, Palo Alto students report higher resiliency and less engagement in high-risk behavior compared to students across Santa Clara County and "comparable schools." But local school officials expressed concern about reported levels of substance abuse. Among 11th-graders, 29 percent reported using alcohol and 19 percent reported using marijuana in the last 30 days. Sixteen percent reported binge drinking in the last 30 days. In terms of school safety, 24 percent of seventh-graders reported they had been harassed on school property in the last 12 months, and 15 percent said they had been afraid of being beaten up. Eighty-three percent of seventh-graders reported feeling safe or very safe at school. In the area of home life, 82 percent of seventh-graders, 78 percent of ninth-graders and 74 percent of 11th-graders report that "There is a parent or some other adult who talks to me about my problems." Regarding school "connectedness," 79 percent of Paly freshmen
and 70 percent of Paly juniors, and 80 percent of Gunn freshmen and 81 percent of Gunn juniors said they felt "meaningful participation." Officials said the two high schools were comparable on "connectedness" data but that Paly students reported slightly higher levels of substance abuse.
The Healthy Kids Survey, taken voluntarily and anonymously, garnered participation by 74 percent of seventh-graders, 87 percent of ninth-graders and 82 percent of 11th-graders. N Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at ckenrick@paweekly. com.
Public Agenda
A preview of Palo Alto government meetings next week
CITY COUNCIL ... The council has no meetings scheduled this week. BOARD OF EDUCATION ... The board will hear reports on official 2012-13 school-enrollment statistics and results of the 2011-12 Healthy Kids Survey. The board also will hear reports from the principals of Gunn and Palo Alto high schools about plans for their guidance-counseling programs. The board will vote on updates to board-policy documents and a resolution on the Stanford-Palo Alto Trails program. The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 9, in the boardroom of school district headquarters (25 Churchill Ave.). PLANNING AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION ... The commission plans to discuss the Comprehensive Plan Amendment and review the proposed designs for the Rinconada Park Long Range Plan. The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 10, in the Council Conference Room at City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.). COUNCIL RAIL COMMITTEE ... The committee plans to hear an update on staff's work with Caltrain on traffic and grade-crossing analysis; consider updates to the Rail Committee Guiding Principles; and discuss a memo to update the community on rail issues. The meeting will begin at 8: 30 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 11, in the Council Conference Room at City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.). HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION ... The commission plans to hear a presentation about Project Safety Net; review its annual priorities; hear a presentation on the Family Odyssey Project from the Midpeninsula Media Center; and consider extending the term of the current chair and vice chair. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 11, in the Council Conference Room at City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.). LET'S DISCUSS: Read the latest local news headlines and talk about the issues at Town Square at PaloAltoOnline.com
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Upfront
TRAFFIC
Road `trial' to remain permanent on Arastradero
After two-year experiment, Palo Alto opts to keep recent lane configurations in place
alo Alto's two-year experiment with lane reductions, traffic-signal modifications and median islands on a busy stretch of Arastradero Road was officially deemed a success Monday, Oct. 1, by the City Council, which voted to make the recent changes permanent. Spurred by a swell of community support for the new configuration, the council voted 8-0, with Gail Price absent, to retain the recent modification to the Arastradero Road stretch in perpetuity. The corridor, which extends from El Camino Real to Gunn High School, is the second phase of a major roadredesign project along Charleston and Arastradero roads that the city launched roughly a decade ago. The changes that the council agreed to keep include a reduction of lanes from four to three at certain stretches of the corridor, along with two-way left-turn lanes, a flashingbeacon crosswalk with a raised median at Arastradero and Clemo Drive; a left-turn signal at Coulombe Drive for eastbound traffic on Arastradero; and a median island at Arastradero and Hubbart Street. The council's vote followed testimony from about 30 residents, most of whom urged retention of the new
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configuration. The city approved changes to the corridor in 2009 and has been monitoring the traffic conditions since. According to the city's Transportation Division, there has not been a significant change in traffic volumes as a result of the change. Nor was there the significant diversion of traffic onto adjacent streets, as some opponents of the new configuration had feared. But there was a bump in bicycling on the corridor. During the morning peak hour, bikes comprise 19 percent of the vehicles in the westbound direction of Arastradero, exceeding the 7.1 percent rate citywide. "We're seeing much more bicycle usage both on Arastradero Road and on Maybell Avenue," Chief Transportation Official Jaime Rodriguez told the council, noting that Maybell is a "bicycle boulevard" that is wellsuited to the increased ridership. Planning Director Curtis Williams said the corridor was targeted for changes because of the high number of schools, community centers and parks in the area. Furthermore, the area's proximity to Stanford Research Park and a slew of dense residential developments that have recently gone up near the corridor have increased congestion, prompting frustration and occa-
by Gennady Sheyner sional episodes of road rage from drivers. The council acknowledged Monday that slow traffic near El Camino Real during peak hours was a fact of life before the trial and will likely remain so going into the future. But Councilman Larry Klein, while acknowledging that "traffic is not going away," argued that the new configuration is the best solution that the city can implement at this time. He called the retention of the new configuration an "easy decision" by the council and a good compromise. "We all criticize and make fun of the `Palo Alto Process' from time to time but this is an example of where the `Palo Alto Process' really worked," Klein said. Councilman Sid Espinosa agreed and stressed the importance of the data-gathering efforts that informed the staff recommendation to retain the reconfiguration of lanes. "We stepped back from an emotional issue and took the time to really look at the issues ... and whether the studies were working or not," Espinosa said. "By my read, all the indications are that it is working and that this is a program and a process that we should make permanent." The council reached its decision
after hearing from a crowd of residents, the vast majority of whom advocated retaining the new configuration. "We've worked patiently and diligently with the city very constructively over the last nine or 10 years," said Rich Ellson, a resident of the Greenmeadow neighborhood who advocates for bicycle improvements with his wife, Penny. "It's time to realize the plan, put in permanent landscaping and medians, and make it easier and more beautiful for the rest of us to travel." Betty Lum, who lives along the corridor, also implored the council to keep the changes in place. "It seems that things have proven that this corridor is working," Lum said. "We live on the corridor. We see the traffic. It is quite encouraging to see the traffic flowing the way it does." But some residents argued that the new signs, lane-changes and medians have made the conditions more confusing and have made driving during busy commute hours an even more miserable experience. John Elman, who has lived in the area for 47 years, called the new configuration a "circus" and disputed staff's data about traffic flow. If there is an increase in bicycling, El-
man said, it's only because children "love the excitement" of all the new traffic signs on Arastradero. Another resident, Shirley Nathan, said she can walk faster than the cars and bikes on Arastradero and Charleston. Nathan said the council should give equal weight to "all modes of transport," rather than favoring bikes over cars. "The emphasis on bikes and pedestrians is great, but not at the expense of cars, which is also the main means of transport for most people." Ultimately, however, the council sided with the majority and agreed to keep the recent changes in place for good. Councilman Pat Burt said the new configuration, by encouraging bicycle use, helps support the city's recently adopted Bicycle and Pedestrian Transportation Plan and helps bolster the city's already strong image as a biking community. "This is a great achievement and it fits in what is becoming a new social norm," Burt said. "For the students, it's now normal to ride a bike to school. It's abnormal not to ride to school. That's a great tipping point." N Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at gsheyner@ paweekly.com.
HOUSING
Buena Vista residents urge city to save their homes
Dozens urge Palo Alto to halt a plan that would turn their mobile-home park into a dense housing complex
esidents of Palo Alto's only surviving mobile-home park are rising up against a proposal from a San Mateo-based developer to turn their community into a dense housing development. Dozens of residents of Buena Vista, a 117-unit complex in the Barron Park neighborhood, attended the Monday, Oct. 1, meeting of the City Council to beseech city leaders to halt a redevelopment proposal by the developer Prometheus Real Estate Group. The San Mateo-based developer is looking to purchase the property at 3980 El Camino Real and build a 187-unit housing complex. As the Weekly first reported last month, Buena Vista residents had recently received letters from one of the park's property owners, Joe Jisser, informing them that his family was exploring redevelopment options. Prometheus has acknowledged that it is considering redeveloping the property, which the city would have to rezone to allow the greater density sought by the developer. More than 30 residents attended Monday's meeting, many carrying signs that said "Save Our Homes." Many urged the council to do something to stop the redevelopment plan
Crime
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by Gennady Sheyner that they said would displace them. Misael Morale Sanchez, an 18-year-old student at West Valley College, said he feared the redevelopment plan would cost many of the children who currently live at Buena Vista an education. He said he was able to save up and pay for his tuition only because his parents can afford to pay the rent at the mobilehome park. "For folks like myself, who attend college, we can afford to go to college because of the affordability of having been able to live in this mobile home park," Sanchez said. "For that to be taken away may cost us our education." Other speakers, including several children, approached the council with more direct pleas. "My concern is about all of our kids," said Jennifer Munoz, a student at Terman Middle School. "Where will we be living if you close down our homes?" Winter Dellenbach, a Barron Park resident and frequent critic of the city's "planned community" rezoning process, also asked the city to do what it can to keep the current residents at Buena Vista, one of the few areas in the city with afford-
able housing. The residents of the mobile park, like their counterparts in other parts of the city, are simply trying to follow their dreams, said Dellenbach, who lives within a few blocks of the park. "These people should stay where we are," Dellenbach said. "Some have been here for decades. They're some of the most vulnerable among us but they're not victims." Because the public spoke during the "oral communications" portion of the meeting, the council was procedurally prohibited from responding to the residents' concerns. But Planning Director Curtis Williams exchanged contact information with some of the residents, and Mayor Yiaway Yeh said staff will reach out to them to try to address their concerns. Buena Vista, which currently includes 104 mobile homes, 12 studios or cabins and one single-family residence, is one of the few developments that directly addresses Palo Alto's frequently cited shortage of affordable housing. Residents currently pay about $800 to $1,300 a month in rent. N Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at gsheyner@ paweekly.com.
fighting effort. "The residents need to do more to protect ourselves so that crooks don't think we are easy targets. And we can do that by having more surveillance at intersections that lead out of our neighborhoods. If they know we have eyes on them, they will move on," she said. Jim Lewis, who lives near the border of Crescent Park and Duveneck/St. Francis neighborhoods, said he and other residents are working to host a community forum on home, auto and personal safety. "With the recent spike in home burglaries, auto break-ins and personal confrontations, the meeting is timely," he said. The group is actively discussing potential methods, such as alarm and camera systems, locking gates, dogs, enhancing lighting, including some with motion detectors, and reviving a Neighborhood Watch program. They are also developing a list of vendors who install the devices, he said. Old Palo Alto resident Stan Hutchings has created a handout, "Who Are You, parked in front of my house," that residents can place on unfamiliar cars that appear to be loitering. The flier's purpose is to give neighbors a way to let potential criminals know that people are watching, he said.
"The appeal for people to park in their driveway and ask their guests and workers to park in front of their house, and for everyone to be alert for vehicles that don't belong, seemed like a good idea," Hutchings said. "The appeal was in response to a recent burglary a few blocks away." Palo Alto jeweler Georgie Gleim said that while security such as cameras and surveillance is important, sharing information is the best defense. She should know. "We host a local industry network for just this purpose, and it has helped jewelers throughout the Bay Area prevent losses," she said. Many of the residential burglaries have involved jewelry thefts totaling tens of thousands of dollars. On a neighborhood level, prompt information-sharing can help everyone, she added. "We all end up being each other's keepers in some ways," she said. On Oct. 1, an alert resident called 9-1-1, an act that led to the apprehension of an alleged serial auto burglar, 30-year-old Abigail Lee of Santa Clara. She had 50 car keys in her possession to facilitate break-ins, according to Palo Alto police. She also had items stolen during other car burglaries in San Jose and Santa Clara. N Staff Writer Sue Dremann can be emailed at sdremann@ paweekly.com.
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Upfront
What school is meant to be.
Gunn
(continued from page 3)
Open Houses: Upper School Oct. 28, Dec. 2 Middle School Oct. 7, Nov. 4
www.menloschool.org/admissions
trict materials on guidance review as well as a report from We Can Do Better Palo Alto outlining a "counseling gap" in parent and student satisfaction levels between Paly and Gunn. "They (Paly and Gunn) are not comparable. There's a huge divergence, and the notion that the board stated is they want comparability," said Gunn parent Amy Balsom, a member of We Can Do Better Palo Alto. Gunn parent Kathleen Blanchard noted the board's direction for comparable services, not necessarily the same structure. "I think we should look at what's good for Gunn, not necessarily what's comparable to some other school," Blanchard said. "The last thing we need is to set up some sort of football-like rivalry. We should focus on what students need."
The group tried to clarify its charge from the board, as well as ground rules for a safe and open discussion of differences. The next scheduled meeting of the Gunn Guidance Advisory Committee is Oct. 16 at 3:45 p.m. in the Gunn staff lounge. Meetings are open for community members to observe. Members of the committee are parents Amy Balsom, Kathleen Blanchard, Alexis Green, Lori Krolik, Linda Lingg and Jyoti Sahdev; teachers Kristy Blackburn, Diane Ichikawa, Lynne Navarro and Lettie Weinmann; students Rebecca Alger, Wayland Fung and Julia Qin; counselors Myesha Compton and Jovi Johnston; Gunn Assistant Principal Tom Jacobousky and district Director of Secondary Education Michael Milliken and support staff member Olga Celis. N Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at ckenrick@paweekly. com.
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Upfront
News Digest
Man uses son's bike to chase suspected burglar
A man used his son's bike to chase down a suspected burglar Monday evening, Oct. 1, after the man and his family returned to their home in the 300 block of Kingsley Avenue to discover it had been recently burglarized, Palo Alto police said. Agent Marianna Villaescusa said the family arrived home around 7:51 p.m. and noticed a young man on a bicycle circling the area in front of the house "doing figure eights." Upon entering the house the family noticed that the backdoor was open and heard a commotion on the east side of the home, she said. The family quickly realized a burglary had occurred, and the man called police and used his son's bike -- which had been moved to the front of a neighbor's house -- to chase after the young bicyclist, she said. About a half a block up, the man spotted three teenage boys in a small alley at the same time a police officer arrived. The responding officer detained the three boys, all juveniles, who seemed "very nervous," she said. The boys said they were on their way to Greer Park to play basketball but then started to give conflicting statements, and two of the boys lied about their names, she said. Another officer arrived to do an area check and discovered stolen items hidden in a bush near where the juveniles were detained. It was later discovered that the items -- including jewelry, U.S. currency and a pocket knife -- had been taken from the Kingsley residence, she said. One of the youths was taken to juvenile hall, and the other two were released to a juvenile center, Villaescusa said. All three were cited for burglary and conspiracy, and two were also cited for giving false information to a police officer. N -- Tyler Hanley
For a complete list of classes and class fees, lectures and health education resources, visit pamf.org/healtheducation.
Oct. 2012
Cancer: From Prevention to Survivorship
Saturday, Oct. 13 s 9:30 a.m. � noon
Please join us for a free program dedicated to increasing awareness about cancer, prevention and survivorship.
Mountain View Center 701 E. El Camino Real, Mountain View, Conference Rooms C & D
For more information, visit pamf.org/events for more details.
Aging and the Reproductive Cycle
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Sunnyvale Public Library 665 W. Olive Avenue, Sunnyvale Presented by PAMF Fertility Doctors No registration needed.
Palo Alto takes a stand against death penalty
Palo Alto thrust itself into a statewide debate over the death penalty Monday night when the City Council emphatically endorsed a proposal to abolish the practice, which officials characterized as both morally and financially crippling. The council voted 8-0, with Gail Price absent, to adopt a resolution spearheaded by Councilwoman Karen Holman and Mayor Yiaway Yeh that endorses Proposition 34. The measure seeks to abolish the death penalty and replace it with life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. It would also create a $100 million fund that would be distributed annually to law-enforcement agencies. In endorsing the measure, Holman and Yeh stressed the financial impact of California's death penalty, which is estimated by the Legislative Analyst's Office to cost the state about $130 million annually. In their memo, they argue that this financial drain has resulted in fewer grants coming to the city from the state for capital projects. That amount the city receives in state grants has shrunk from $2.7 million in 2009 to zero in 2012 and 2013, Holman and Yeh noted. Holman said that while the city cannot guarantee that the passage of Proposition 34 will necessarily result in grant funds being rerouted to local communities, it seems clear that if the death penalty remains, the funds will "most certainly not be" rerouted. The financial argument, and the death penalty's impact on local infrastructure, was the focus of the colleague's memo. N -- Gennady Sheyner
Walk away with a better understanding of the anatomy and physiology of the female and male reproductive tracts, including the factors that impact fertility. Learn what a fertility workup consists of and available treatment options to facilitate conception and a successful pregnancy.
Test Your Eye Q
Tuesday, Oct. 9, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain View Center 701 E. El Camino Real, Mountain View Presented by Barbara Erny, M.D. PAMF Ophthalmology 650-934-7380
Learn about eye conditions including macular degeneration, dry eye and cataracts in this interactive session.
What's Autism and Is It More Common Today?
Dr. Marvin Small Memorial Parent Workshop Series
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Mountain View Center 701 E. El Camino Real, Mountain View
!UTISM5PDATES s s Changes in how it is diagnosed How to recognize it s s Tips for families touched by autism How to help your child
Palo Alto hires development director
Palo Alto's aggressive effort to reform its famously frustrating permitting operation hit another landmark this week when the city hired its first-ever Development Services Director. Peter Pirnejad, who has spent the past four years as assistant director of economic and community development in Daly City, was hired to oversee Palo Alto's Development Center, the nexus of the city's permit applications and a frequent source of customer frustrations. The hiring of Pirnejad, which City Manager James Keene announced Wednesday, Oct. 3, is the latest component in Keene's effort to improve customer service and efficiency at the Development Center -- an effort that also included adding new project managers, hiring a day-to-day manager for the center and leasing space above the Development Center. Pirnejad will be charged with taming what has become known derisively as the "Palo Alto Process" and coordinating the efforts of the various city departments involved in the process, including Planning, Fire, Public Works and Utilities. According to a statement from Keene, Pirnejad was selected after an extensive search that yielded 64 applications. Eight candidates were ultimately selected for interviews with three panels, which included department stakeholders, community representatives and Bay Area public sector leaders. He will begin his duties on Oct. 16 and will receive a salary of $161,249. N -- Gennady Sheyner
Presented by Trenna Sutcliffe, M.D. PAMF Pediatrics, Developmental Specialist 650-934-7373
Upcoming Lectures and Workshops
November
Palo Alto s 5NDERSTANDINGTHE-EDICARE0LANS Mountain View s 0REPARINGFOR4RAVELTO3OUTHEAST!SIA 7ITH#HILDRENn0ARENT7ORKSHOP3ERIES
facebook.com/paloaltomedicalfoundation twitter.com/paloaltomedical pamfblog.org Scan this code with your smartphone for more health education information. Get the free mobile scanner app at http://gettag.mobi.
LET'S DISCUSS: Read the latest local news headlines and talk about the issues at Town Square at PaloAltoOnline.com
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Upfront
These and other news stories were posted on Palo Alto Online throughout the week. For longer versions, go to www.PaloAltoOnline.com/news or click on "News" in the left, green column.
Online This Week
Walk & Roll days roll out throughout Palo Alto
Palo Alto schools are celebrating Walk & Roll Week this week, with activities designed to encourage students to walk, bike, skateboard, scooter, carpool or ride the bus to school. (Posted Oct. 4 at 9:37 a.m.)
Gunn to host college fair Monday
Students from all local high schools are invited to the 2012 Palo Alto College Fair to be held Monday, Oct. 8, at Gunn High School. Representatives of more than 100 public and private colleges will be available to speak with interested students and parents. (Posted Oct. 4 at 9:23 a.m.)
!
Firefighters rescue woman from creek
Firefighters from Palo Alto and Menlo Park worked together Wednesday evening, Oct. 3, to rescue a 56-year-old woman who had fallen 40 feet into a dry creek, according to Palo Alto Fire Battalion Chief Chris Woodard. (Posted Oct. 4 at 8:33 a.m.)
Arrillaga eyes El Camino sites in Menlo Park
Developer John Arrillaga has his eye on El Camino Real -- more specifically, former auto dealership lots now owned by Stanford University. (Posted Oct. 4 at 7:57 a.m.)
SLAC at 50: still very much a going concern
The SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory on Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park is 50 years old this year. The facility began as a particle smasher -- accelerating electrons to nearly the speed of light inside a two-mile-long underground tunnel and allowing the particles to collide in such a way as to produce meaningful information about the structure of matter. (Posted Oct. 3 at 8:52 a.m.)
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Salman Rushdie on life in hiding
Listening to Salman Rushdie tell the story of a desperate man who goes into hiding to save his life, is forced to move from house to house -- sometimes in the dead of night -- and must lock himself into the bathroom whenever the plumber or electrician comes around to fix some common household problem, it's easy to forget that the acclaimed novelist with a bent toward the fanciful isn't spinning a tale.
(Posted Oct. 2 at 3:51 p.m.)
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Couple held at gunpoint during home invasion
A couple was held at gunpoint inside their home in Mountain View early Monday, Oct. 1, while five assailants ransacked their residence -- stealing cash and a handgun before leaving, according to police.
(Posted Oct. 2 at 2:19 p.m.)
Election 2012: Stories, editorials, videos
Stories, editorials, videos, photos and links regarding the upcoming Presidential General Election on Nov. 6, 2012. Palo Alto Online will update results live on election night starting at 8 p.m. (Posted Oct.
2 at 1:29 p.m.)
Resident finds woman rummaging through car
Palo Alto police arrested a woman Monday morning, Oct. 1, after a resident found her rummaging through his car in the 500 block of Fulton Street. The woman, 30-year-old Abigail Lee of Santa Clara, was found with stolen property from three other victims in San Jose and Santa Clara. (Posted Oct. 2 at 12:28 p.m.)
Saturday, October 6, 2012 | 9:30 - 11:00 a.m.
Maples Pavilion, Stanford University | www.stanford.edu/roundtable
What if you could erase bad memories and wipe out stress, use sadness to make you more creative, keep your brain fit into your 90s, and drastically reduce your risk of Alzheimer`s and memory loss? The plasticity and capability of the brain have never been better understood. New research is revealing compelling findings that will change the way we think, interact, and plan throughout our lives. As longevity and at the same time mental health issues are on the rise, our ability to impact the brain is also increasing. Yet these are the very early days of understanding what some have called "those three pounds of meat inside our heads." How can we apply the new brain science to our own lives, and how is neuroscience in the 21st century going to impact us all? Join ABC News correspondent Juju Chang and a panel of distinguished thought leaders and scientists to explore the brave new world of neuroscience and what it means for you and your family.
Juju Chang
Moderator, ABC News
John L. Hennessy
President Stanford University
Menlo Park man injured in freeway shooting
Police in Belmont continue to look for witnesses to a shooting that took place along a mile of U.S. Highway 101 in San Mateo County Sunday afternoon, Sept. 30. (Posted Oct. 2 at 12:13 p.m.)
`Unstable' man prompts evacuation of buildings
After closing roads to traffic and evacuating buildings in south Palo Alto Monday afternoon, Oct. 1, police took a mentally unstable man into custody after an hours-long standoff. (Posted Oct. 1 at 4:25 p.m.)
Dr. Frank Longo
Chair, Neurology & Neuroscience, Stanford University
Carla Shatz
Professor, Biology and Neurology Director, Bio -X Stanford University
Two pedestrians seriously injured on El Camino
Atherton Mayor Bill Widmer has sent a strongly worded message to Caltrans demanding that improved safety measures be put into place on El Camino Real -- the scene of yet another accident that left two pedestrians seriously injured after being struck by a vehicle Sunday, Sept. 30. (Posted Oct. 1 at 1:24 p.m.)
Want to get news briefs emailed to you every weekday? Sign up for Express, our new daily e-edition. Go to www.PaloAltoOnline.com to sign up.
Bob Woodruff Free and open to the public. Held in collaboration with Reunion Homecoming Weekend. -No tickets required -Event begins promptly at 9:30 a.m. and seating may be limited thereafter -Parking is limited so plan to arrive early and consider public transportation
ABC News The Bob Woodruff Foundation
Jill Bolte Taylor
Neuroanatomist Author, My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist`s Personal Journey
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the Palo Alto
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Upfront
WE S
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CityView
A round-up of
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Palo Alto government action this week
City Council (Oct. 1)
Traffic: The council approved the retention of the recent lane configurations, including a reduction of lanes from three to four, along the Charleston-Arastradero Road corridor. Yes: Burt, Espinosa, Holman, Klein, Scharff, Schmid, Shepherd, Yeh Absent: Price Proposition 37: The council approved a colleagues' memo from Karen Holman and Yiaway Yeh endorsing Prop. 37, which would abolish the death penalty. Yes: Burt, Espinosa, Holman, Klein, Scharff, Schmid, Shepherd, Yeh Absent: Price
Trash: The committee discussed a proposed pilot program to introduce organicwaste pickup for residential customers and reduce the frequency of regular trash pickup. Action: None Energy: The council approved a power-purchase agreement with Brannan Solar LLC for purchase of electricity over 25 years at a cost not to exceed $91 million. Yes: Burt, Scharff, Shepherd Absent: Price
Council Finance Committee (Oct. 2)
Parks and Recreation Commission (Oct. 3)
Updates: The commission reviewed and commented on the ongoing Rinconada Park Master Plan and discussed the status of the Magical Bridge Playground at Mitchell Park. Action: None
Planning and Transportation Commission (Oct. 3) Utilities Advisory Commission (Oct. 3)
Page Mill Road: The commission approved a rezoning of four parcels at the 400 block of Page Mill Road from residential to commercial to enable construction of a mixed-use building. Yes: Alcheck, Martinez, Michael, Panelli, Tanaka, Tuma Absent: Keller
CLEAN: The commission voted to recommend continuation of the Palo Alto Clean Local Energy Accessible Now (CLEAN) program. Yes: Cook, Eglash, Foster, Hall, Melton No: Waldfogel Absent: Chang Efficiency: The commission recommended approving the city's 10-year energyefficiency goals. Yes: Cook, Eglash, Foster, Hall, Melton, Waldfogel Absent: Chang
Architectural Review Board (Oct. 4)
Heights: The board held a study session to discuss making revisions to the city's building-height limit. Board members were generally in favor of allowing new buildings taller than 50 feet at certain locations, provided they include amenities and are in context. Action: None
Cowper Street and Homer Avenue, only a few blocks away. Affectionately called "George," it was a coast live oak that sprawled well beyond the confines of the surrounding sidewalk. Prior efforts to save the tree, including cable support and the removal of seven tons of trimming, had proved insufficient. In George's case, the tree's health was reviewed by an arborist hired by the city, and its removal recommended. Dockter cited Shel Silverstein's book, "The Giving Tree," as a model for positive outlook on the loss of a tree. He said the oak on High Street provided shade and beauty for perhaps 200 years, and with work to preserve its wood, it could provide people with joy for another 200. "Provenance is what makes any antique more valuable than another," he said. Under the afternoon heat this week, Girton moved among the stockpiles where segments of the felled valley oak sat. He pointed to a stack of cross-sections leaning against a wall and a separate group of logs -- future tables and woodturnings, he said, for neighbors who could use something by which to remember it. N Editorial Intern Pierre Bienaim� can be reached at pbienaime@ paweekly.com.
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A
CITY OF PALO ALTO NOMINEES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following persons have been nominated as candidates for the office of Council Member for the City of Palo Alto in the General Municipal Election on Tuesday, November 6, 2012, for the four full terms commencing January 1, 2013, and expiring December 31, 2016: 1. Marc Berman 2. Pat Burt 3. Timothy Gray 4. Liz Kniss 5. Gregory Schmid 6. Marc B. Weiss The polls will be open from 7:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m., on Tuesday, November 6, 2012. DONNA J. GRIDER, MMC City Clerk
Pulse
POLICE CALLS
Palo Alto
Sept. 29 - Oct. 3
Violence related Domestic violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Family violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Suicide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Theft related Attempted burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Commercial burglary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Grand theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Identity theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Residential burglaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Vehicle related Attempted burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Driving w/suspended license . . . . . . . . .3 Hit and run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Misc. traffic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Theft from auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Vehicle accident/minor injury . . . . . . . . .1 Vehicle accident/property damage. . . . .4 Vehicle impound . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Alcohol or drug related Drunk in public . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Drunken driving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Possession of drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Miscellaneous Found property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Lost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Psychiatric hold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Terrorist threats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Warrant arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Warrant/other agency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
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Theft related Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Residential burglaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Vehicle related Auto theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Driving w/suspended license . . . . . . . . .1 Theft from auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Vehicle accident/property damage. . . . .1 Alcohol or drug related Drunken driving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Miscellaneous Found property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Info case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Lost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Outside assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Probation violation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Terrorist threats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Warrant arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3
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NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETING of the City of Palo Alto Architectural Review Board (ARB)
At 8:30 A.M., Thursday, October 18, 2012, the ARB meeting will take place in the Palo Alto Council Chambers, 1st Floor, Civic Center, 250 Hamilton Avenue. Any interested persons may appear and be heard. Filed documents may be viewed at the Development Center, 285 Hamilton Avenue. Contact Diana Tamale for information regarding business hours at 650.329.2144. 1701 Page Mill Road [12PLN-00283]: Request by Jim Inglis of Stanford Real Estate on behalf of The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University for Architectural Review of the demolition of 67,000 square feet of existing commercial development floor area and construction of a 116,000 s.f., two story research and development building on an 8.5 acre site. The project includes a Design Enhancement Exception for an encroachment into the 35 foot maximum height limit. Zone District: Service Commercial (RP). Environmental Assessment: An Initial Study and Mitigated Negative Declaration have been prepared. Rinconada Park Long Range Plan: Study session requested by Palo Alto Public Works Engineering for review of the draft long range plan for future improvements to Rinconada Park. The City of Palo Alto does not discriminate against individuals with disabilities. To request accommodations to access City facilities, services or programs, to participate at public meetings, or to learn more about the City's compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), please contact the City's ADA Coordinator at 650.329.2550 (voice) or by emailing ada@cityofpaloalto.org. Amy French Chief Planning Official
Atherton
Sept. 29 - Oct. 3
Theft related Fraud . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Vehicle related Parking/driving violation . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Suspicious vehicle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Vehicle accident/major injury . . . . . . . . .1 Vehicle accident/minor injury . . . . . . . . .1 Vehicle accident/property damage. . . . .4 Vehicle code violation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Miscellaneous Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Coroner case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Disturbance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Disturbing/annoying phone calls. . . . . . .1 Fire call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Hazard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Lost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Medical aid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Outside assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Psychiatric hold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Property for destruction . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Suspicious circumstances . . . . . . . . . . .3 Suspicious person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Trespassing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
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Transitions
Irene Elizabeth Bauer
Betty (Irene Elizabeth) Bauer, a longtime resident of Portola Valley, died Sept. 16 at the age of 102. She was born May 6, 1910, in Anaconda, Mo. She and her brother Ralph grew up in upper Michigan. She attended Lawrence College in Appleton, Wis., with studies in psychology and botany, and later graduated from Boston School of Occupational Therapy. She married Carl R. Bauer, a civil engineer, in 1940. Together they raised three children. In 1946, the family moved from Toella, Utah, to Los Trancos Woods in Portola Valley where their daughter, Nancy, was born. In 1965, after going back to school for additional education in teaching preschool children, and with her husband's full support, she opened Betty Bauer's Country Pre-School in Los Trancos Woods. It embodied all she enjoyed: the freshness of young children, exploring nature, crafts and art. She was an explorer of many subjects. She loved to walk in the woods and go camping as a family. She read a lot, particularly on spiritual matters. She was especially drawn to Jungian psychology. She was a faithful member of Christ Church and attended regularly. Carl died in January 1983. In 1989, after her pets passed on, she became a resident of The Sequoias in Portola Valley. She is survived by her three children, Barbara E. (Babbie) Shenkel (Cena Anderson) of Billings, Mo., Webster R. (Bill) Bauer of San Diego, Calif., and Nancy H. Conti (Jim Conti) of Jamestown, Calif.; two grandchildren, Thor Erik Shenkel (LaDawn McIntyre) of Tigard, Ore., and Aaron Conti of Lakewood, Wash.; and her nephew,
Richard Eugene McGuire
December 23, 1946 - August 17, 2012 Resident of Palo Alto
Our beloved Richard has passed away at home. He is survived by his wife Kay (Kathleen), his son Jed (wife Mindy, daughter Meara), son Aaron (wife Akari), son Frank (wife Melissa, son Aiden), sister Donna, brother Dennis (wife Susan). He is preceded in death by his parents, Ara Lorraine and William McGuire, and brother, Alan. Richard's long career in "the valley" is only surpassed by his recent career in retirement. There isn't much that Richard did not like since he retired! Gardening, making pickles, jam, traveling, spread sheets, reading , opera, cooking, fishing, politics, NPR junkie and above all spending time with his family, friends, and beloved Brittany Spaniel Molly. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests a donation "In Memory of Richard McGuire" to San Francisco Youth Symphony, c/o Michael Williams, Development San Francisco Symphony, 201 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco, CA 94102. Services have been held.
PA I D OBITUARY
Ralph Hayden III (Marge Hayden) of Joppa, Md., and their four grown children. Services are planned for Nov. 10, 2012, at 2 p.m. at Christ Church, Portola Valley, followed by an informal reception.
Dorothy Cartan
Dorothy Mary Bjorklund Cartan of Menlo Park died at home Sept. 24. She was 87. She was a wife, mother, grandmother, sister, aunt and friend. She is survived by her brother, Richard Bjorklund ( D or ot hy) ; children, Leslie Shackelford (Doug Campbell), Linda Philpin (John), Karen (Lisa) Dunton, Howdie (Melissa), Jim (Nancy) and Ian Cartan (Kurt Culver); two grandchildren, Jim and Addie Cartan; nieces, nephews and many friends. She was preceded in death by her parents, Theodore Bjorklund and Selma Gabrielsson Bjorklund; her brother, Len Bjorklund; and her husband, Henry Cartan III. She was a first-generation American born to Swedish immigrants on May 14, 1925, in Minneapolis, Minn., where she graduated from St. Louis Park High School in 1943. During World War II she moved to California, where she lived until her death. The family wishes to thank caregivers Tina and Luisa and Vitas Hospice for their exceptional care. Contributions in her memory may be made to Charles Armstrong School (www.charlesarmstrong. org), 1405 Solana Drive, Belmont, CA 94002; the American Cancer Society (www.cancer.org), P.O. Box 22718, Oklahoma City, OK 73123; or the American Heart Association (www.heart.org), 1710 Gilbreth Road, Burlingame, CA 94010.
October
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Spectrum
Editorials, letters and opinions
Editorial
Burt, Schmid, Berman, Kniss for City Council
With mixed feelings about Kniss returning to the council, we conclude her regional experience could serve the city well
n the last Palo Alto City Council election in 2009, with 14 candidates, voters overwhelmingly reelected Larry Klein to his second four-year term after he had previously served two terms in the 1980s. Klein was the top vote getter among a field of 14 candidates and the only incumbent in the race. This year, it is former council member Liz Kniss who wants to return to the council after having served 11 years in the 1990s followed by 12 years as a Santa Clara County Supervisor. She is termed out from running again for supervisor, and, ironically, is able to run for council this year only because she successfully urged a change in local elections to even-numbered years. With a new city manager, a severe economic crisis and a council made up of no one else who had served more than two years, back in 2009 the city needed Klein's historical perspective and knowledge, experience and his willingness to be blunt with city staff when necessary. But with a council that over the last three years has coalesced, matured and worked well together through some very challenging years, the need for the likes of Klein and Kniss is lessened today, and therefore Kniss's prior experience on the council should count far less in this race. Some might even argue that her past service works against her, since her political insider status fails to broaden the community perspectives represented on the council. Among the other five candidates in the race, two are incumbents (Pat Burt and Greg Schmid), two are candidates who ran unsuccessfully in 2009 (Tim Gray and Mark Weiss) and the fifth is attorney Marc Berman, at 31 the youngest candidate. Unlike in the 2009 race, when 14 candidates vied for five slots, this year the field is the smallest in memory. Weiss says he is not spending any money in his campaign and Gray is limiting himself to a modest amount of his own funds. As a result, both are long-shots, and many political activists have proclaimed that there is not a real race this year. Two events four years ago indirectly define this race: the hiring of City Manager Jim Keene in September 2008 and the world-wide economic collapse that began with the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy that same month. The city hired Keene when the developing recession was only beginning to impact Palo Alto, but as he started the city was slammed by economic forces that has preoccupied it ever since. At the strong urging of the council, Keene was not only faced with cleaning out a severely underperforming management group but also working with the council to implement financial measures to address unprecedented declines in city revenues. Thus the last four years have been dominated by the dual challenges of cutting back personnel, benefits and services, while taking steps to encourage new economic development.
I
While there have been some serious missteps along the way (the tree-cutting on California Ave. and the Alma Plaza development are just two examples) for the most part the council has worked cohesively with the city manager to prevent greater economic calamity. Unfunded pension and retiree health obligations approved by past councils remain huge and complex problems, but the city has been well-served by the council's actions over the last few years to begin rolling them back. The Stanford hospital expansion was successfully negotiated, meaningful reductions in employee compensation and benefits were achieved, binding arbitration was repealed and the investment in city infrastructure, led by the new library/ community center construction and renovations, was increased at a time other cities were cutting back. With a more welcoming city attitude toward development, motivated by the need to boost the local economy and shore up the city's revenue base, and with investment capital and commercial lending rebounding, the next city council will have some important choices to make. If recent development proposals are any indication, who we elect to the city council this year may matter a great deal in determining the future character of the community. We believe both incumbents, Pat Burt and Greg Schmid, are worthy of another term. In many ways they are opposites, with Schmid, an economist, a believer in process, careful study and especially reluctant about development without clear financial benefits for the city, and Burt, a business owner-entrepreneur, preferring to immerse himself in the details of an issue with an eye toward improving what the staff has recommended, often to the point of micromanaging yet usually with beneficial ideas. Schmid often finds himself alone on issues and unable to persuade his colleagues to his point of view, but his perspective is often unique and valuable and his analysis usually sound. He approaches every issue like the economist he is. Burt distinguished himself as mayor in 2010, leading efficient meetings by being firm -- yet not shutting down debate -- when his colleagues began bogging down the discussion. As a council member, he is always well-prepared and puts his nine years of Planning Commission experience to good use. He is an effective leader, although sometimes his strong opinions make him appear insensitive to those with differing viewpoints. Our choice for one of the two "open" slots due to Yiaway Yeh and Sid Espinosa stepping down is Marc Berman, whose passion for public service almost led to his running for Assembly in 2010 until he determined the field was too strong for him to be a viable contender. Berman, like Yeh and Espinosa, would bring the perspective of a younger generation of resident to the council. Raised in Palo Alto and a Palo Alto High School graduate, Berman served on the city's InfraBut, that is not a home theater, unlike Berkeley Rep, ACT and San Jose Rep, each of which has its own dedicated venue. I served on TheatreWorks' board from '90-'96, and have subscribed for more than 20 years. I live and work in downtown Palo Alto and am as concerned as everyone about the "quality of life" in our city. For me quality of life means more than the density of the population. It means people on the street, seeing productions that en-
structure Blue Ribbon Commission and impressed us with his solid knowledge of the issues and with the breadth of support he has obtained in the community. He has not staked out any bold positions on city issues, preferring instead to simply raise concerns about things like neighborhood parking, new development and the future of the Cubberley site, without committing to specific solutions or actions. Rather than a shortcoming, we find his approach to be one reflecting a commitment to studying issues and listening to the public rather than standing for a set of specific outcomes. On a nine-member council, these qualities will serve the community well. For the final slot, and with some reservations, we recommend Liz Kniss. Kniss has grown tremendously since she was first elected to the council in 1989 and her public health background is unlike that of any other candidate or current council member. More than most of the current council, Kniss thrives on networking and listening to community members and their concerns. She believes the council has been too easy in negotiating with developers and is not happy with the new proposal by John Arrillaga to build four office towers at 27 University Ave. Her three terms as county supervisor gives her a unique perspective of regional issues and challenges. While we are strong believers in developing new leaders to guide the community, the gap in experience between Kniss and Tim Gray and Mark Weiss is simply too great. For voters looking for an alternative to Kniss, either out of principle or because of her views, Tim Gray is the best alternative. Gray is a CPA and financial consultant specializing in recovering overpayments by companies that have gone through mergers or acquisitions. He lives in south Palo Alto with his wife and three school-age kids, and he wants to contribute his financial skills to the city's budget issues and to evaluating development proposals. He is concerned that the council is too responsive to developers and that continuing to approve new commercial development will lead to the city being forced to provide more housing to compensate for the jobs being created and that will lead to unwanted intensification. The sixth candidate, Mark Weiss, is a Gunn High School graduate and a music producer, arts advocate and writer. He believes both the city's pension and infrastructure problems have been "oversold" to the community, and that city workers have shouldered too much of city budget cutbacks. He believes the council gives too much weight to developers and opposes the practice of granting development rights in exchange for public benefits. . This year's council race is not as competitive as we would have liked given the governance challenges that lie ahead. We believe that Pat Burt, Greg Schmid, Marc Berman and Liz Kniss are the best choice for dealing with these issues and recommend their election on Nov. 6. residents. The time has come for Palo Alto to have a theater building to house a world-class theater company, TheatreWorks. Perry Irvine Bryant Street Palo Alto
A home for TheatreWorks
Editor, I support the proposal that will bring TheatreWorks back home. Palo Alto, my home for 40 years, occupies a unique status in the Bay Area, the U.S., indeed the world. It is home to a great university and the capital of technology innovation worldwide. Its downtown is vibrant, a magnet for the area. Great cities foster talented and
diverse groups of arts institutions, including theater and music. Palo Alto residents have had the unusual opportunity to see the growth of a great theater group, TheatreWorks. Today it is known through the theater world for its innovative, exciting and stimulating productions. But it's never had its own home. In the early `90s, Mountain View erected a theater, where it has continued, indeed accelerated, its growth as a first-rate company.
tertain and challenge, feeling the beat of life that often follows an interesting and well-produced play or musical. Whether the City can, or will, contribute to a new theater building for TheatreWorks, the City should not stand in the way of it being built. The site between El Camino and the tracks is convenient to downtown, its restaurants and public transportation. It is within walking distance for many Palo Alto
Full disclosure
Editor, I think the Weekly should ask
(continued on page 18)
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Guest Opinion
What to look for in a school board candidate
by Barbara Klausner
P
AUSD is exemplary. At every school, students, parents, teachers and staff are deeply engaged in support of student learning and well-being. Overall academic achievement is outstanding. Our superintendent has effectively led the district for five years, assembling a strong team of administrators and partnering with community supporters. So, who needs a school board? How can a candidate add value? According to Bylaw 9000 (Role of the Board), the board serves five basic functions for the district: (1) setting its direction; (2) establishing its organizational structure; (3) supporting the superintendent and staff; (4) ensuring accountability for its schools' performance; and (5) providing community leadership and advocacy on behalf of students. In my view, the first and fourth functions pose the greater challenges and should be the focus of this election. In serving these functions, I believe a board member should have the knowledge, skills and will to: (a) articulate a vision, (b) transform that vision into a set of meaningful, achievable goals, (c) demand accountability in meeting those goals, and (d) promote the diffusion of our successful practices through the district. It is easy to parrot these words but surprisingly difficult to follow through in the face of a robust status quo. Here are just of few of the challenges.
Identifying what works best and scaling that out broadly across the district: There is a widely held belief among all stakeholders that we should look to best practices within and beyond our district and promote their dissemination. Yet there is also a tradition of bottom-up decision-making and an aversion to top-down decision-making. This is a key leverage point for improvement cited by Bertil Chappuis, the McKinsey consultant who spearheaded the development of our 2008 Strategic Plan. Mr. Chappuis observed that "Palo Alto has an opportunity given that this is a medium-sized district with lots of talented people who are trying all sorts of interesting, effective teaching approaches, and yet we may be sub-optimized around identifying what works best and scaling that out broadly across the district." He noted the difficulty in "finding the right balance between individual teaching approaches and consistency and developing the Palo Alto program." In other words, where programs or practices work well in the district, the central administration, under the guidance of the school board, should identify them and promote their use more broadly. There is a healthy but, in Mr. Chappuis' terms, "sub-optimized" tension between bottom-up and top-down decision-making. In my view, a greater degree of centralized direction would better serve our students in certain fundamental areas -- meeting the needs of student subgroups above or below grade level or otherwise in need, promoting student connectedness, managing student workload, aligning content and assessment in similar courses, and teacher/ home communication in our digital age, to name a few. So I would look for a candidate who favors a degree of top-down decision-making to facilitate the use of successful practices across
the district and understands the significance of "finding the right balance" between autonomy and centralization -- one digestible, collaborative and transparent step at a time. Goal-setting and holding ourselves accountable: not "the cardiac test: Harvard Prof. Roland Fryer has commented that educators, when asked how they know they are effective, answer that "you can feel it in your heart." He calls this "the cardiac test." Fortunately, the board does not use the cardiac test to measure whether district goals have been met, but it has at times struggled to identify what counts. This year, we made great strides in setting Annual Goals with specific, measurable, achievable results. There is still a temptation, however, to tread lightly when goals are not met. For example, while we have made laudable progress toward meeting our three long-term Strategic Plan K-8 Academic Goals, we have not met any of them. Why have we fallen short? Can our programs be improved? Are our goals unrealistic? This reluctance to hold ourselves fully accountable has the unfortunate effect of preventing a more complete understanding of what did and did not work, which impairs our ability to effectively set new goals. With a new Strategic Plan "refresh" slated for 2013, it is imperative that the incoming board take that last step of evaluating progress under our current Strategic Plan as the first step in creating a new one. Data-driven decision-making: The board has access to vast amounts of useful data, but we have not yet mastered a process by which to optimize use of those data. The challenge for a board member is to be effective in parsing data to evaluate our district's successes and shortfalls and to guide us in spreading our successes, correcting our shortfalls and establishing new
goals. Recently, the board was asked to digest a 45-minute presentation on the three aforementioned Academic Goals involving CST scores. That trove of data has yet to be fully mined for information about program effectiveness and student progress. Last year, the district adopted new high school graduation requirements ("A-G"), and there will be an emerging, urgent need to figure out what data to track in order to monitor our work and student success under this new regime. We need an incoming board that will dig into data, ask probing questions and act on what it learns. So, how can a candidate add value? S/he can acknowledge the significance of scaling out best practices, effectively use data in decisionmaking, work to set well-informed goals and demand accountability -- selectively, intelligently, strategically, collaboratively and respectfully, of course. Included in the BoardSource's list of "Twelve Principles of Governance That Power Exceptional Boards" are two of particular relevance: (a) a Culture of Inquiry ("seek more information, question assumptions, challenge conclusions, advocate for solutions based on analysis") and (b) Results-Oriented ("measure progress towards mission; evaluate the performance of major programs and services; gauge efficiency, effectiveness, and impact, while simultaneously assessing the quality of service delivery, integrating benchmarks against peers, and calculating return on investment"). In voting for a candidate, please consider these principles and enjoy your right to participate in democracy. N Barbara Klausner is a member of the Palo Alto Board of Education and can be reached at Barbara.klausner@gmail.com.
Streetwise
Where is the best nature area or scenic spot that Palo Alto can offer?
Asked on Middlefield Road and Cambridge Avenue, Palo Alto. Interviews and photographs by Junesung Lee.
Paul Kobayashi
Software engineer Evergreen Park "Well, there's Foothills Park, the duck pond and The Dish. I often go to Peers Park as well -- that's our local park."
Elaine Jenkins
Nanny Mountain View "I would say down by Page Mill, The Dish. I used to walk a lot down there."
Chuck Wilson
Software engineer South Palo Alto "Up on the Russian Ridge, Skyline Boulevard. You can see the oceans, the bay, and there's lots of wildlife."
Jose Torres
Student Midtown "I'd say Foothills Park. I've been there a few times."
Richard Vicenti
Consulting CFO Southgate "The Foothills. I've been there many times to go hiking, fishing and camping with my daughter."
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Spectrum
Letters
(continued from page 16)
all candidates for city council to disclose whether they live in Palo Alto, and ask all candidates for school board who have school-age children whether their children are enrolled in Palo Alto schools. It has come to my attention that at least one candidate for the school board has school-aged children who attend (or did attend) private school while the candidate served on the school board. I was shocked to learn this, and I think Palo Alto voters need to know this before they decide how to cast their votes. Personally, I believe that someone who wants to serve on the school board should believe our schools are good enough for their own children, just as I believe that someone who wants to serve on the city council should choose to live in Palo Alto. Peggy Kenny Cowper Street Palo Alto
them. They are pushing for remaking this city into a mini-Manhattan complete with bumper-to-bumper traffic, overcrowded schools, massive noise, air and visual pollution. Remember when the city council used to talk about being green and sustainable? Now it is all about keeping developers happy and destroying the ambiance of the city. We need a referendum on the ballot that limits all buildings to the zoning that is listed in the comprehensive plan: nothing over 50 feet and no more exemptions with planned community zoning without a public vote. We need to elect city council members who are not in the pockets of developers and who will fire planning department employees who are. Interesting how they didn't announce this project until after the slate for the city council election was final. Tina Peak Palo Alto Avenue Palo Alto
Palo Alto under seige
Editor, It's the '50s and '60s again! Palo Alto is under siege by developers. After Measure E, we now know that no park is safe from developers. 1. Measure E locks up 10 acres of our Baylands Park for 10 years and will cost millions to figure out if this project is remotely feasible. 2. (John) Arrillaga, a developer,
Fight urbanization
Editor, The Palo Alto City Council and the Palo Alto Planning Department have obviously decided that massive urbanization is what they want for the city of Palo Alto. It is obvious that the concerns of residents for a peaceful neighborly place to live are of no concern to
wants to add our 7.7 acres of land adjacent to Foothills Park to his own 44-acre estate. This land was given to us by the Lee family for conservation. We should honor that gift and add it to Foothills Park. 3. Arrillaga also wants to develop the El Camino Real/University Avenue entrance to Palo Alto with four huge high-rise, traffic-generating buildings and usurp part of El Camino Park. Two committees studied this area and recommended an enhanced transportation center above all else. This development does nothing for Palo Alto, only enhances the developer and eliminates future alternatives for our city. 4. The Bike/Pedestrian bridge across 101 near Adobe Creek. This bridge could be good if the east end does not destroy Baylands Park marshes and eliminate a great stand of trees used by Baylands birds. If it does use parkland, it must go to a vote. The answer to developer Arrillaga is easy. NO. Our parks are not for sale or expendable for private development. Enid Pearson, former Palo Alto City Council member Forest Court Palo Alto
Patron or patr�n?
Editor, The no-brainer is the council's/ staff's consideration of John Arril-
laga's project. It is an insult to the people of Palo Alto and the physical integrity of this city. Arrillaga was described as a "patron," which was reflected in "the generosity encompassed in his plan." He may define himself a "patron" and behave as if he is a "patron," but in Spanish the word "patr�n" means boss. Arrillaga is not a "patr�n" and we are not his employees. This council was not elected to regale Arrillaga or entertain a development inconsistent with the composition of this city. Arrillaga oversaw the construction of buildings he paid for at Stanford with his "low tolerance of bureaucracy" and "getting his way." Stanford did not always share Arrillaga's designs, but went ahead with the projects. We Palo Altans are not beholden to this man, his development or his arrogance. Palo Alto is not Stanford. The proposal that Stanford gets a steady "revenue stream" is troubling. Our state colleges and universities need such a "permanent revenue stream." Stanford is not in the financial doldrums. The project does not appear to benefit anyone except Arrillaga and Stanford. It does not "reflect the character of today's downtown." The lack of respect the council/staff have for Palo Altans is reflected in the report's short four-day notice. Are they trying to ram this monstrosity down our throats?
"Disservice" is a nice word for deceitful maneuvering. Joni Reid Embarcadero Road Palo Alto
Missing Hobee's
Editor, I am saddened over the closing of Hobee's in Town and Country Village. Hobee's has been a staple in this location long before I was even born. Despite its further distance from my home, Town and Country was one of my favorite Hobee's because of the exciting buzz of the many surrounding Palo Alto activities and businesses. It was one of the most relaxing locations to just sit in a sunny spot with a delicious breakfast and read the newspaper or people watch. With their Minnie Mouse pancakes, delicious salad bar and cozy atmosphere, Hobee's was a key part of my childhood dining experience. There is nothing like their piping-hot blueberry coffee cake topped with sugary cinnamon crumbles and melty butter drizzled on top. Luckily, there are still other locations to visit. But, it will be sad to drive by and see the empty space eventually filled with one of the many newly opening businesses. A piece of history has been removed. Alyssa Jacobson Oakhurst Avenue Los Altos
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Cover Story
Tight school board race sparks lively discussion
What's the right balance between central management and `site-based decision-making?'
by Chris Kenrick
competitive race for Palo Alto Board of Education has stirred spirited discussion this fall, unlike the last school board race in 2010, when two incumbents ran unopposed. A major issue that's emerged is the proper balance between centralized rule-making and school-based decision-making -- the latter a long-dominant culture holding that authority and accountability should stay as close to the classroom as possible. Most urgently, that concern has arisen with respect to high school guidance counseling -- an area in which Palo Alto's two high schools dramatically differ in the way they deliver services. One candidate, software engineer Ken Dauber, has argued that, by this fall, Gunn High School should have adopted what he says is a clearly superior counseling model used at Palo Alto High School, which uses 40 "teacher-advisers" to augment a small counseling staff. The other three candidates say they're willing to allow time for an internal Gunn committee to recommend reforms to its traditional counseling system -- which in the past has not used teacher-advisers -- so long as students at both high schools get "comparable services." Principals from both Gunn and Paly are due to present progress reports on their counseling systems to the Board of Education next Tuesday, Oct. 9. Board members have said they'd like to see a new system launched at Gunn by next fall in which students would have contact with more adults. Four candidates are competing in the Nov. 6 election for three available spots on the board. Besides Dauber, they include another challenger, parent educator Heidi Emberling, as well as incumbents Melissa Baten Caswell and Camille Townsend. The high-performing K-12 Palo Alto school
A
district, with an enrollment of 12,268, is in the midst of a $378 million facilities-bond-construction program to modernize and expand its 17 campuses to keep pace with rising enrollment. District officials are currently searching for a location to open a fourth middle school, and there's general agreement that a 13th elementary school will be needed in the next five years, assuming enrollment trends continue. The district also is in the midst of negotiating with the City of Palo Alto over the fate of the district-owned Cubberley High School campus, which closed in 1979 due to declining enrollment and has operated as a community center under long-term lease with the city. All candidates cite facilities decisions as one of the top concerns for the board, and there is no clear disagreement among them on that issue. But Dauber has been more critical of the district than Emberling, saying greater sophistication with data could have yielded more certainty about enrollment projections and that shortage of good data means the district has failed to "engage in a full partnership with the city over Cubberley." Following a devastating string of Palo Alto student deaths by suicide in 2009 and 2010, the district adopted programs to boost the socialemotional health of students, including use of the wellness framework Developmental Assets, participation in the community coalition Project Safety Net and individual school initiatives to increase "student connectedness." Dauber was an early critic of the pace of change, calling last year for the board to replace Superintendent Kevin Skelly who, Dauber argued, was not squarely addressing issues of academic stress that he believes can contribute to suicide. Dauber and members of a group he cofounded, We Can Do Better Palo Alto, began lobbying the board for greater attention to
homework loads and test scheduling as well as for a change in the academic calendar so that the first semester ends before the December holidays. The long-debated calendar shift -- with emotional voices on both sides -- was approved in a 3-2 board vote last year, with both Caswell and Townsend opposing the change. While Dauber considers the new calendar a positive step in relieving student stress, Emberling is critical of the district's handling of the decision process, saying the board should have better explained why it was considering the controversial change. She says the potential negative effects of the new calendar should be carefully measured. Following recommendations of 24-member parent-teacher Homework Committee this past May, the district adopted a new homework policy, outlining specific amounts of time kids should be spending on homework. Implementation of the new homework policy is among the district's top-priority goals for this school year. Dauber, who served on the Homework Committee, said he was pleased with the result but believes the district has not moved quickly enough on another stress-point -- lack of coordination on the scheduling of tests and project deadlines. He has called on the district to require teachers immediately to begin using the technology tool Schoology to post assignments and deadlines. Disagreement over the proper pace of Schoology implementation again goes to the balance between central management and site-based decision-making, with the other candidates arguing that top-down orders are less likely to stick in the long run. "I love online resources, and you do need some push from the top to make things happen," Townsend said. "At the same time, it's got to be respectful,"
she said. "We've asked teachers to implement various technologies that did not work well in the past, so you want to make sure your technology works and you offer a lot of training before you ask everybody to adopt it." In a recent candidates' forum, Townsend, Caswell and Emberling said they like what they've seen of Schoology but that implementation would have more staying power if teachers are given time for training and allowed to grow the program from the bottom. Dauber disagreed. "If we have something that can produce benefit for students ... we should be requiring our schools to do the right thing and adopt the practice system-wide," he said. The idea of "site-based decision-making" was endorsed in Palo Alto following a 1992 parent-teacher task force on the subject. Even before that, Palo Alto schools had a long history of deferring to principals on many decisions -- a practice common among affluent, suburban districts, according to former Palo Alto Superintendent Jim Brown, who convened the 1992 Task Force on Site based Decision-Making. "It's not unique to Palo Alto," said Brown, who was a superintendent in five California districts over 26 years and now works as a consultant. "The idea is you'll get a better school system if you allow this degree of autonomy. It's a more empowering culture, and you're more likely to encourage innovation and creativity." But Dauber says it's time to realize sitebased decision-making has gone too far. "We've emphasized site-based control at the expense of the idea that every child has a right to equal access to services," he said. N Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at ckenrick@paweekly.com.
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Cover Story
Good for Business. Good for You. Good for the Community.
Palo Alto Historical Association
presents a public program
Melissa Baten Caswell
Former business manager, `lice checker,' promotes learning through service
by Chris Kenrick eeking re-election for a second term on the school board, Melissa Baten Caswell cites her business background and "deep volunteer experience." In her first term, she persuaded the management-consulting firm McKinsey & Company to produce, at no cost, a strategic plan for the Palo Alto school district. Four years later, that plan continues to guide board decision-making. Caswell also has spent much of her personal time promoting the Developmental Assets, a youth-wellness framework adopted by the school district and other local groups following a string of student deaths by suicide in 2009 and 2010. She sees the "asset-building" program as useful not just for teen mental health but also for pushing students toward genuine learning. "Our district is really good at putting out students with high test scores. We're really good at sending our kids to excellent post-highschool options. But our goal needs to be a little different than that," she said. "We need to create leaders for the next generation -- they need to be learning because they're curious, because they're challenging themselves to learn more, not just for the A grade." Caswell said the asset-building aligns with her role as a board member of the nonprofit Youth Community Service, which works in Palo Alto and East Palo Alto to foster youth leadership through service. "If our kids aren't going to be the leaders for the next generation I don't know whose are," she said. "I think it's important for us to invest in that kind of (community service) learning." In her first board term, Caswell parted company with the majority in two controversial votes: a 3-2 decision in 2009 to adopt the K-5 mathematics textbook "Everyday Mathematics," and the 3-2 vote in May 2011 to revamp the 2012-13 and 2013-14 academic calendars to begin the school year in mid-August so as to end the first semester before the December holidays. She served as president of the
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Sunday, October 7, 2012, 2:00 p.m.
Lucie Stern Community Center, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto
2EFRESHMENTSs.OADMISSIONCHARGE
Veronica Weber
PALO ALTO CITY COUNCIL
CIVIC CENTER, 250 HAMILTON AVENUE BROADCAST LIVE ON KZSU, FM 90.1 CABLECAST LIVE ON GOVERNMENT ACCESS CHANNEL 26
Melissa Baten Caswell board from 2010 to 2011. On the current debate over high school guidance counseling, she backs the process now in place and says "it would be a huge shame" to undermine the district's culture of site-based decision-making by having the board specify to Gunn how to organize its program. "There's value for some things to be managed from the top -- managed, not mandated," she said. "But we have a culture here that we've hired professionals and told them they can do their best work, and we'll give them goals and hold them accountable. "If we mandate things from the top and it feels like people are being micromanaged I worry that some of our best people will leave." As a former manager in technology companies, she said she found "if you told people how to do the details of their jobs they stopped making decisions themselves and started becoming passive-aggressive." But Caswell admits that the board "could do a better job at clarifying and communicating goals (to school staff) and how we're going to hold people accountable." Caswell earned an MBA and spent 14 years in the business world, first on Wall Street and later in Silicon Valley, before devoting herself to volunteer work. She was president of the Palo Alto PTA Council, a Girl Scouts leader, and sits on the board of the Palo Alto Art Center Foundation in addition to Youth Community Service. Among a long list of community activities she lists on her resume, she includes that of "lice checker" at Duveneck Elementary School. Caswell says the remarkable level of diversity in Palo Alto schools is not always well recognized. "We have kids whose parents never went to high school and who come home and have no books in their home. We have kids who have every opportunity but are not engaged. We have kids with every opportunity and are engaged. We have kids with special needs, and we have kids from every country in the world. "There are so many different variables that reaching every kid where they are is a big challenge, but that is really our responsibility," she said. N
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THIS IS A SUMMARY OF COUNCIL AGENDA ITEMS. THE AGENDA WITH COMPLETE TITLES INCLUDING LEGAL DOCUMENTATION CAN BE VIEWED AT THE BELOW WEBPAGE:
http://www.cityofpaloalto.org/knowzone/agendas/council.asp
STANDING COMMITTEE MEETINGS
The City Council Rail Committee will meet on October 11, 2012 at 8:30 AM to discuss; 1) Grade Crossing and Traffic Analysis, 2) Memo Updating Community on Where Rail Issues Stand, and 3) Discussion of how Rail Committee will Respond to the Rail Corridor Task Force Final Report.
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(VE[MRKJVSQWSQISJSYVEVIE�W�RIWXTVSJIWWMSREPW we will help to guide you through the process, EW[IGSRWMHIVXLIPIKEP�RERGMEPERHIQSXMSREPPERHWGETI of divorce. In addition, we will be addressing the aspects of career transition, LIPTMRK]SYVGLMPHVIRGSTIERH�RHMRKVIWSYVGIW that will help you to heal.
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Cover Story
he would not vote to fire the superintendent. "I see myself as having a strong working relationship with Dr. Skelly and expect that to continue on the board," he said. While not claiming full credit for recent board votes to shift the academic calendar and raise the graduation requirements for traditionally underperforming students, Dauber thinks the presence of We Can Do Better members at school board meetings has been a "critical step" in provoking change. Dauber, a former assistant professor of sociology, has worked for the past 13 years as a software engineer, the last five of them at Google. He has consulted on education issues for a variety of organizations, including the U.S. Department of Education, Education Trust and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He is critical of district participation in national magazine rankings of high schools advertising "how our kids `stack up' against others." "If we focus exclusively on the highly visible measures, then we risk sending the message to kids who aren't achieving at that level but are still growing and strengthening their own potential that their work isn't valued and their effort isn't valued," he said. "I think that we should value achievement at all levels." N
Watch candidate interviews online
he Palo Alto Weekly conducted T interviews this week with all four candidates for Palo Alto Unified School District Board of Education: Camille Townsend, Heidi Emberling, Ken Dauber and Melissa Baten Caswell. The half-hour interviews were video recorded and will be posted on YouTube and Palo Alto Online this weekend. To watch the videos, go to either www.PaloAltoOnline.com or www.youtube.com/paweekly.
Veronica Weber
Ken Dauber
Ken Dauber
Software engineer believes `We Can Do Better Palo Alto'
by Chris Kenrick
C
andidate Ken Dauber has posed a challenge to the Palo Alto school district's longheld culture of "site-based decisionmaking." He thinks the district has been slow to spread "best practices" among all schools and has called for greater top-down direction in areas such as high school guidance counseling and requirements that teachers use technology tools to post assignments online. Unlike the other candidates, who have served in leadership posts in the PTA and school site councils, Dauber has gone directly to the school board to lobby on issues he cares about, mainly in the area of reducing academic stress. For the past 20 months, he and members of an organization he co-founded, We Can Do Better Palo Alto, have become regulars at board meetings, advocating on issues ranging from changing the academic calendar to creating a new homework policy. He has called for Gunn High School to adopt the "teacheradvisory" counseling model long used at Palo Alto High School and asked the board to require secondary teachers to use the software tool Schoology to post assignments online. The district historically has opted for a different approach, asserting there's greater compliance and buy-in from teachers when they're permitted to develop their own systems so long as students on every campus are receiving "com-
parable" services. But, Dauber said in a recent interview, "School site-based decisionmaking has gone too far. "For example, at Paly we have years of evidence that teacher advisory is delivering guidance services more effectively than the more traditional model at Gunn. "We should be able to take that knowledge and produce comparable services for students across the district." Dauber also has called for greater transparency in district communication. His use of the California Public Records Act -- he filed seven requests for information from the school district between April and June -- has sparked change in the way the school district handles communication. Namely, Superintendent Kevin Skelly's "Confidential Weekly" memo to board members, previously private, is now posted on the district's website for all to see. If elected, Dauber said he would go even further, advocating public posting of all communication between school board members and district staff, except that related to legally protected personnel and student issues. After 20 months of activism, Dauber has softened his earlier call for the school board to replace Skelly. In February 2011, he and his wife, Michele, published a guest opinion in the Palo Alto Weekly calling for "new leadership" in the school district. Dauber now says that if elected,
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Commentators: Daphne Koller / Stanford
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Cover Story
Heidi Emberling
Early-childhood specialist, volunteer with a passion for education
by Chris Kenrick andidate Heidi Emberling says serving on the school board would be a natural extension of her profession as an early-childhood specialist and parent educator and her passion for education. As a close watcher of the board for the past two years -- she's attended nearly every meeting -- Emberling has plenty to say about how the district could have better managed touchy issues such as the academic-calendar change and the need to make board meetings more efficient. But she disagrees with the other non-incumbent candidate, Ken Dauber, about the need to significantly change the district's prevailing culture of site-based decisionmaking. "Programs aren't going to be successful unless there's buy-in from all stakeholders," Emberling said, referring to Dauber's position that Gunn High School should adopt a Palo Alto High School-style teacher advisory system. "You're not going to be able to impose a new comprehensive guidance system on top of what teachers want or don't want at a school."
C
In the case of guidance counseling at Gunn, the board appropriately has set expectations and left it to a Gunn task force to develop a structure that will offer Gunn students a level of service comparable to that at Paly, she said. "The big issue is making sure we have equity with regards to the two systems," she said. Emberling was an Emmy-nominated producer, writer and editor for 12 years before shifting careers to become a parent educator. She earned an Emmy nomination for editing a segment of a 12-part series on the history of San Francisco for KRON-TV and also produced and directed "Spirit of the Dawn" about the Native American education system and "Tangled Roots," about her personal struggle to reconcile her dual heritage as both German (her father) and Jewish (her mother). She now works part-time at Parents Place, an organization of Jewish Family & Children's Services, conducting child behavioral observations and running preschool staffdevelopment workshops. She began volunteering at Juana Briones Elementary School when the older of her two children began
Heidi Emberling school there and quickly found herself PTA President and chair of the school's site council. When other parents began asking her questions around the time of the controversy surrounding adoption of the K-5 Everyday Mathematics curriculum, she began attending school board meetings to get answers. She watched the board struggle through the vexing issues of the academic calendar -- finally voting in May 2011 to move the school-year start to mid-August so as to end the first semester before the December holidays -- and student mental health following a string of student deaths by suicide in 2009 and 2010. Emberling thinks the district could have done better on the calendar is-
sue -- explaining more clearly early in the process why changes were being considered and creating a website aimed at clarifying the issues. Somehow it was laid out in a way that people felt like they weren't being heard," she said. "Like with the guidance system, there's probably an outside-the-box solution for the calendar as well. I'd like to explore potentially a quarter system, which means you'd start after Labor Day and still end (first semester) before the holidays." Emberling has participated in Project Safety Net, the community collaborative to promote teen wellness that was created following the suicides, and places "student connectedness" at school high on her priority list. She also advocates reform of board processes to make meetings more efficient. "I think it's anti-democratic for board meetings to go until 1 a.m. or later -- you're limiting public access at that point," she said. "We need to look at how they plan agendas and know what every agenda item is supposed to do and set some goals around that." In general, Emberling views herself as a consensus builder. Referring to her work on Project Safety Net and as a board member of the independent fund-raising foundation Partners in Education, she said, "I really enjoy that collaborative work -- bringing people together for the sole issue of making sure our kids feel supported." N
Veronica Weber
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Cover Story
Camille Townsend
Two-term member calls experience an asset in face of fiscal uncertainty
by Chris Kenrick f re-elected next month, school board President Camille Townsend would be the first Palo Alto board member in more than 40 years to serve more than two terms. But the veteran of school-funding wars counts her experience as an asset in light of the fiscal uncertainties facing public education in California. "It takes experienced people to anticipate where the issues will be and get involved at the state and local level to provide the budget necessary to run our school district," she said. She has worked to augment district funds with passage of a parcel tax and a bond measure, she said, noting that the $378 million bond construction program is "on time and on budget." She also cites district progress on raising graduation requirements and narrowing the achievement gap during her tenure. Townsend cut her teeth on schoolfinance issues in 2002 when she spearheaded a letter-writing campaign to then-Gov. Gray Davis after he proposed taking $126 million in local property-tax revenue from districts such as Palo Alto, which are funded under the so-called "basic aid" formula. Bombarded with opposition, Davis ultimately withdrew his proposal. She was elected to the board in 2003, serving as board president in 2006-07 as well as in the current year. She was elected to her second term in 2007. Townsend was an early backer of the Mandarin Immersion program, supporting it through two controversial board votes in 2007. She parted company with the board majority in her opposition to the 2009 adoption of the Everyday Mathematics curriculum for Palo Alto elementary schools.
I
Townsend said Palo Alto had failed to use due diligence in researching the pros and cons of Everyday Mathematics. "I have no confidence that we can be successful with this," she said at the time. "To bring in a math book with this level of dissent when we know we can do better gives me great pain." More recently, she voted against the change in the 2012-13 and 201314 academic calendars, which moves the school-year start date to mid-August so as to finish the first semester before the December break. She argued the district had never made a case for why the change would help students, and sided with a group of parents who argued the new calendar will exacerbate, not reduce, student stress. Townsend defends the district's strong culture of site-based decision-making as the best way to foster innovation. "Coming from the Midwest, everything was top-down," she said. "A unique and wonderful thing about Palo Alto is that teachers are allowed to create classes around their passions." She cites a biotechnology class that began at Gunn and spread to Paly and innovation in Paly's strong media-arts program. On the hot topic of high school counseling, Townsend said that without a policy of site-based decision-making, Paly never would have developed its teacher-advisory system. "But we need to do better in bringing collaboration between the schools, and that takes money so teachers can talk to each other. And certain services must be offered for both high schools," she said. Townsend, who grew up in Wisconsin, has worked as a youth counselor, probation officer, lawyer and professor of business law.
She got involved in Palo Alto schools as a newcomer from Indiana when the older of her two daughters was in sixth grade at Jordan Middle School and did not appear to have a math textbook. "Being a diligent parent I saw that there was a math meeting at Jordan, so I went to the meeting and found out there was no textbook. There were just these handouts that kids would use." She served as PTA president at Nixon Elementary School. "It's just my general inclination to think that public education is so important," said Townsend, whose own parents never got beyond the eighth grade. Townsend and her siblings have made it to college and beyond. "Thank God for the public schools," she said. N
Veronica Weber
Camille Townsend
ELECTION 2012
Candidate Forums
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��ܰ*>�"i�V�U�*>���7ii��U�"V�Li��x]������U Page 23
Arts & Entertainment
A weekly guide to music, theater, art, movies and more, edited by Rebecca Wallace
BY REBECCA WALLACE
HUMANINTEREST
stories
Seventy documentary films, including world premieres, to be screened at 15th United Nations festival
Gillian Laub
Top: Bishop Gene Robinson and his husband, Mark Andrew, in the film "Love Free or Die." Center: From left, stills from other films to be shown at the United Nations Association Film Festival: "A Flicker in Eternity," about a young boy in a Japanese internment camp; "Reportero," about journalists facing hazards in Mexico; and "Semper Fi: Always Faithful," about water contamination at Camp Lejeune.
n a film still from a documentary about his life, Gene Robinson stands in his elegant bishop's vestments, a pointed miter atop his head, as he holds the tall ceremonial staff known as the crozier. He's the picture of this year's theme for the United Nations Association Film Festival: "Human Dignity." Dignity, Robinson's story shows, is often something you have to stand up and fight for. In 2003, when Robinson was ordained as the first openly gay Anglican bishop, he had to wear a bullet-proof vest underneath those elegant vestments because he had received so many death threats. The threats and opposition have continued even as Robinson has worked in his New Hampshire diocese and beyond for marriage equality and equal rights in the church, and in society. "I appreciate the Church of England from which so many churches around the globe were birthed. But I long for it to express its full and unequivocal acceptance of women, and to find its way toward embracing and celebrating the gay men, lesbians, bisexual, and transgender people within and beyond its congregations," Robinson recently wrote in a blog on the Huffington Post. In 2010, Robinson announced that he would retire early because of the threats, controversy and continuing strain on him and his husband, Mark Andrew, stepping down in January 2013. But many say it's likely he'll remain in the public
I
eye as a symbol and speaker in the gay-rights movement. He gave the invocation at President Obama's opening inaugural ceremonies in 2009, and his story was told in the 2007 documentary "For the Bible Tells Me So." Now a new documentary about Robinson, which premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, is coming to Palo Alto this month as part of the United Nations Association Film Festival. Directed by Macky Alston, "Love Free or Die" will be shown at 4 p.m. Oct. 19 at the Aquarius Theatre at 430 Emerson St. It depicts Robinson's story and his calls for equality against a background of change in the church. As the film's synopsis puts it, this is a time when "American churches debate whether or not lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people are equal to heterosexuals in the eyes of God, while our nation debates whether LGBT people are equal to heterosexuals in the eyes of the law." Debates will no doubt continue in the wake of Robinson's book "God Believes in Love: Straight Talk about Gay Marriage," which was released in September. Now in its 15th year, the Stanford University-based film festival runs Oct. 18 through Oct. 28, with 70 screenings at Stanford and in Palo Alto, East Palo Alto, San Francisco and San Jose. The all-documentary lineup focuses on films
(continued on page 25)
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Arts & Entertainment
(continued from page 24)
D OWNSIZING B Y D ESIGN
by Siobhan O'Sullivan
that deal with timely global issues such as interracial marriage, philanthropy, human trafficking, Internet crime and freedom, and scarce natural resources. Stanford lecturer Jasmina Bojic founded the festival in 1998 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Besides offering screenings, the festival also puts on free panel discussions on such topics as filmmaking and philanthropy, and arts activism. Many filmmakers are scheduled to be in attendance, with one Oct. 23 panel consisting of the Stanford filmmakers in the festival. All screenings are free for students and seniors. The festival starts at the Aquarius Theatre on the evening of Thursday, Oct. 18, with live music by worldmusic percussionist James Henry and opening remarks at 6:45 p.m. by Palo Alto Mayor Yiaway Yeh. A screening of the short film "Mexican Cuisine" follows at 7 p.m., with the feature "The Well: Water Voices from Ethiopia" at 7:15. Directed by anthropologist and filmmaker Paolo Barberi, the Italian/Ethiopian film looks at survival during the dry season in southern Ethiopia, thanks to an unusual water-management system. At 8:30, the Polish/Russian/ American feature "The Red Button" will be shown. It centers on Stanislav Petrov, a Russian officer who is billed as having saved the world from atomic war in 1983. Petrov opted not to sound the alarm when a false alert came in about incoming American missiles, and the film goes on to analyze the repercussions of his choice. Ewa Pieta and Miroslaw Grubek directed the 52-minute film. Screenings continue at the Aquarius through Oct. 21, then move to the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University and other locations. On Oct. 23, several screenings will also be free for teachers at the Girls' Middle School at 3400 W. Bayshore Road in Palo Alto and at Eastside College Preparatory at 1041 Myrtle St. in East Palo Alto. Films include the feature "Buffalo Girls," about two Thai girls trying to win the country's Muay Thai championship, to be shown at 1:45 p.m. at the middle school; and "The Lord is Not On Trial Here Today," a feaWhat: The 15th annual United Nations Association Film Festival, with screenings of documentaries from various countries, along with free panel discussions Where and when: Events are at Stanford University and in Palo Alto, East Palo Alto, San Francisco and San Jose, Oct. 18-28. Cost: Most film sessions (one-anda-half to three hours) cost $10 for general admission. Daily passes are $25 on weekdays and $35 on weekends, general admission. Panels are free, and some screenings are free for teachers (all screenings are free for students and seniors). Info: For a complete schedule and ticketing information, go to unaff. org or call 650-724-5544.
Go Out To Eat and Support Peninsula Volunteers Meals on Wheels !
Experts on aging have a `hit-list' of items that help ensure a happy and fulfilling life in our senior years. The list includes: a healthy diet, keeping active and fit, social interaction, intellectual stimulation, having a safe, stable and comfortable place to live and having a purpose in life. Peninsula Volunteers Meals on Wheels is a wonderful charitable program that offers people the opportunity to get involved, help feed those in need, give you social interaction and intellectual stimulation and certainly will give you a much needed and greatly appreciated purpose in life! Now you can support the program by simply going out to eat! Dine out all day on Tuesday October 16th at one of the participating local restaurants, and 10% of your bill will be given back to Peninsula Volunteers, Meals on Wheels! The long list of restaurants include; Alice's, Carpaccio, John Bentley, Max's, The Sundance, Trellis, the Woodside Bakery...... the list goes on! All you have to do is go out, have fun and a great meal and don't forget to mention the program to your waitperson! For a full list of participating restaurants go to www.penvol.org. And if you feel you have time and energy to help the cause in any additional way give the Peninsula Volunteers a call on 650-322-0129 or visit their website! They are always on the lookout for caring volunteers and support.
A still from the film "Journey of a Red Fridge," which follows a young Nepalese cargo-carrier in the Himalayas. ture about a 1940s church-and-state battle in public schools, screening at 4:10 p.m. at Eastside. Several of the films in the festival are world premieres, including "State of Control," a 90-minute documentary about the Tibet-China conflict and Internet freedom in Tibet. The film is directed by Christian Johnston and Darren Mann, who went undercover in Tibet to profile five activists. It will be shown at the closing session on Oct. 28 at Stanford's Annenberg Auditorium, at 3:45 p.m. N
For answers to any questions you may have, or, advice or tips you may want to share relating to Downsizing by Design, please email me at sos@osullivanteam.com Siobhan is a residential real estate specialist with Dreyfus Properties.
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Learn. Create. Be inspired. Discover the artist in you!
www.cityofpaloalto.org/artcenter
Tours, art activities for all ages, music and dance performances, art cars, food trucks and more!
Join us as the Art Center reopens to the public after an 18-month, $7.9 million transformation.
The Palo Alto Art Center's grand reopening is funded by Applied Materials Excellence in the Arts Grants, a program of Arts Council Silicon Valley and the Wells Fargo Foundation. Our media sponsor is the Palo Alto Weekly. The Palo Alto Art Center, Division of Arts and Sciences, City of Palo Alto is funded in part by grants from the Palo Alto Art Center Foundation; Arts Council Silicon Valley, in partnership with the County of Santa Clara and the California Arts Council, and private donations.
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Arts & Entertainment
Ecole internationale de la P�ninsule
Worth a Look
Music
opera with new English titles, conducted by Jose Luis Moscovich, who also heads the opera company; and directed by Ragnar Conde. Christopher Bengochea plays Hoffmann, with Rochelle Bard singing all the soprano roles. Performances are at the Lucie Stern Theatre at 1305 Middlefield Road in Palo Alto: Oct. 12 and 20 at 8 p.m. and Oct. 14 and 21 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $40-$75, with discounts available for groups. Go to wbopera.org or call 650-424-9999.
Coyote Lake-Harvey Bear Ranch County Park east of Gilroy, has been chosen as the first-prize work in the current group show of landCalifornia Pops scapes at the league. In addition, Orchestra she also had a second photo, "East After four years of performing on Vallejo Street," accepted into in Los Gatos, the Palo Alto-based the juried display. California Pops Orchestra is comKramer is one of 36 artists in ing back closer to home, with a new the exhibition, which opened this home base at the Smithwick Theweek in the league's main gallery atre at Foothill College in Los Altos and has a reception tonight, Oct. Hills. 5. Mountain View artist Joan OsMany audience members had born Dunkle took second place been asking the upbeat orchestra to with her watercolor painting "Forreturn to the Midpeninsula -- the est Walk," while Connecticut artist Pops used to play at Spangenberg Peter Schachter was awarded third Theatre, among other local venues place for a very different work: -- and conductor Kim Venaas said his "New York late summer afterhe's thrilled to come back. "We do Pacific Art League noon" cityscape created on an iPad Palo Alto photographer Judy do requests after all," he said jokwith a stylus. ingly (the orchestra is an all-request Kramer has had fine fortune so far Woodside artist and art teacher this fall at the Pacific Art League. group). Jim Caldwell juried the show, Shows are usually cheerful af- Her photo "A Profusion of Pop- choosing 38 pieces from 190 subpies," a bright scene captured at fairs punctuated with missions. He describes jokes and patter from Schachter's work as "a the friendly Venaas, fine example of the new focusing on popular world of digital art," Broadway, film and Big one that was created Band music. On Oct. with a virtual airbrush 14, the orchestra's first and several virtual wetshow back home will media tools. be themed "Turn On The exhibition, tithe Heat!" with tunes tled "Scapes: Land, from the Great AmeriSea, and Urban," runs can Songbook by Berthrough Oct. 25 at 668 lin, Gershwin, Kern and Ramona St., with the other classic composers. reception scheduled Jazz/ragtime/stride/cofrom 5:30 to 8 p.m. medic pianist Frederick tonight. Gallery hours Hodges will return to are weekdays from 10 solo with the Pops as a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sathe's done several times urdays from 10 to 4. before, along with feaAdmission is free. Go The photograph "A Profusion of Poppies," taken by Palo tured Big Band singer to pacificartleague.org Alto artist Judy Kramer, is the first-place work in the current Ann Gibson. or call 650-321-3891. Pacific Art League exhibition. The 3 p.m. show is at 12345 El Monte Road in Los Altos Hills. Tickets range from $15 for youths to $42 for premium seats. Go to calpops.org or call 650-8568432.
PRE-SCHOOL
Outstanding fullday program.
WHEN IT'S YOUR CHILD, EXPERIENCE MATTERS.
TEACHING MANDARIN CHINESE IMMERSION FOR 15 YEARS. A LEADER IN FRENCH IMMERSION IN PALO ALTO. ACCEPTING PRE-SCHOOL APPLICATIONS.
LANGUAGE
Longest running bilingual immersion school in the area. Experienced native-speaking faculty.
Art
RSVP FOR A TOUR!
PRE-SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE NOVEMBER 10, 2012
ACADEMICS
Established English curriculum. Rigorous program in a nurturing environment. Low student-to-teacher ratio.
INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF THE PENINSULA 7%"777)340/2's0(/.%
Gulliver graduated with honors from the University of Utah with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology and a Masters in Education.
You've made your house a home.
Gulliver is passionate about diversity on campus. He was born in Buenos Aires and is fluent in both Spanish and English. In addition to teaching Spanish and History, he leads students from the Priory back to his homeland of Argentina for some great adventures in cultural diversity. Gulliver also has a strong interest in serving underprivileged students in our communities and is the Priory Site Director for The Summer Bridge Program, where kids from Redwood City and East Palo Alto are offered courses in Math and English in a summer camp environment. As a member of the Priory's on-campus faculty, when Gulliver isn't teaching, he loves to spend time with his family. ONE OF THE MANY REASONS TO SEND YOUR CHILD TO:
Woodside Prior y School
Admissions Office 302 Portola Road, Portola Valley, CA 94028 650/851-8223 www.PrioryCa.org
Opera
`Les contes d'Hoffmann'
Unless you have a supremely long memory for the arts, the idea of seeing "Les contes d'Hoffman ("The Tales of Hoffman")" at West Bay Opera will seem like a fresh, new idea. The company had its premiere performance of the opera on Feb. 13, 1959. With music by Jacques Offenbach and a libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carre, the opera is based on a trio of tales by the 19th-century German fantasy and horror writer E.T.A. Hoffmann. Hoffmann is also the protagonist of the hallucinatory stories, encountering his Muse, a mechanical doll named Olympia, the overly passionate singer Antonia and the soul-stealing courtesan Giulietta. And there's a bad guy, of course, who's sometimes named Lindorf, and sometimes Dr. Miracle, among other monikers. West Bay will present the French
So who says you have to leave it just because you've gotten older? Avenidas Village can help you stay in the home you love.
Come and learn more on October 25 at 10 am or October 29 at 2 pm. RSVP to (650) 289-5405 www.avenidasvillage.org
Your life, your way, in your home
OPEN HOUSE
for Prospective Students and Families
Saturday, November 10th, 2012 at 10 a.m. Wednesday, November 28th, 2012 at 7 p.m. Saturday, December 8th, 2012 at 10 a.m. For information and to R.S.V.P. contact Admissions at 650.851.8223
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Eating Out
RESTAURANT REVIEW
Some like it hot
The food has a kick and the jazz swings weekly at The Menu
by Dale F. Bentson or most restaurants, there is no business as usual these days. It takes ingenuity and hard work to stay afloat. It's all about value added; that is, providing the little niceties that keep patrons enthused. The Menu, an Indian restaurant on a nondescript corner of El Camino Real in Mountain View, offers quality food with a few extras: live music and an enthusiastic waitstaff, for starters. Open since May, The Menu supplanted the New Saffron restaurant. The force behind the operation is Prakash Aswani, who spent eight months reconfiguring, reconstructing and reassembling the building to suit his needs. The recipes are authentic, transplanted from around India with no specific regional pedigree. Aswani and chef Resham Singh collaborate on the menu. "I came to the restaurant business in a roundabout way," Aswani said. "I am not a
F
Items from the buffet at The Menu include, from left, vegetarian quinoa biryani, kadhai paneer, hariyali pulao and Tandoori chicken.
typical operator. I wanted a meeting place, an assembly, a place to feed people in a creative way." Physically, the space is divided into three sections: a main dining room; a smaller dining room used for lunch, brunch and parties; and a lounge to the rear of the building, where, every Thursday, there is live jazz. The decor does not transport one to the subcontinent. There are a few elements that evoke India. Mostly the decor suggests California, with mustardy walls (arguably saffron), a dark-tiled floor, pendant lighting and oil paintings that look like the golden hills of a California summer. There are sturdy wood chairs, linen-lined tables, and cushy banquets that line the perimeter. Overall, more upscale than I expected, but not exotic. As a welcome, the chef sent what looked like two large crisp curlicue tortilla chips with
Michelle Le
DINNER BY THE MOVIES AT SHORELINE'S
The History Of Pasta Alla Norma
This dish is named for the main character in the Vincenzo Bellini opera "Norma". Most people actually call this dish Pasta cc� Norma. This is incorrect because "cc�" in the Sicilian dialect means "with", thereby making Norma an ingredient, such as "Pasta with zucchini", which is definitely not the case. This dish was dedicated Maestro Bellini and Pasta a la Norma or Pasta Norma-style, refers specifically to this dish and the composer who was from Catania. The authenticity of this classic dish is beholden to the quality and abundance of the sauce, and above all, to the salted ricotta. This is a non-optional, essential ingredient of the dish. If you cannot find Ricotta Salata, you must move far away, for you live in barbarism! Please forgive me...I am nothing without good pasta. From our kitchen to yours. Giulia Grisi as Norma in 1831 Buon appetito!
Cucina Venti
Pasta Alla Norma
Tomato sauce-from scratch s 4BLS%XTRAVIRGINOLIVEOIL s CLOVESCHOPPEDGARLIC s OZCANCRUSHEDTOMATOES s FRESHBASILLEAVESTORNINTOSMALL pieces s SALTANDPEPPER Saut� garlic in olive oil until translucent. Add tomatoes and basil. Stir and cook for 10 minutes. Salt/pepper to taste. May be made ahead and refrigerated or use a good quality jarred sauce s4BLS%XTRA
VIRGINOLIVEOIL s POUNDSEGGPLANTPEELEDANDCUT into 1" cubes s OUNCESCUPRICOTTASALATA grated s &RESHBASILLEAVESTORNBYHAND s 0INCHCRUSHEDREDCHILIPEPPERSLICED [or dried flakes] s 3ALT s POUNDSPAGHETTI
1390 Pear Ave., Mountain View (650) 254-1120 www.cucinavendi.com
Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday through Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday
To cook: In a large skillet over medium high heat, fry the eggplant cubes and red pepper flakes in olive oil until eggplant begins to soften and caramelize. Drain off any excess oil and add tomato sauce and reduce to medium heat Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and cook the spaghetti al dente, drain retaining some of the pasta water, and transfer to a large bowl. Check sauce and add pasta water if sauce appears too dry. Pour sauce over the spaghetti and toss with the salted ricotta and torn basil leaves
Serve with grated Pecorino
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Eating Out
two curry dipping sauces. Unfortunately, the waitress rattled off the food names at a staccato rate. Even asking her to repeat was not enlightening. The dipping sauces had good flavors but were thin and watery, which made them impossible to adhere to the chip. Probably my favorite dish came first. The kale pakoda ($7) was a small platter of organic kale leaves, drenched in chickpea flour and deepfried. The kale was light and flavorful, akin to tempura. More of the same curry dipping sauces appeared. They worked better with the kale. Chili chicken ($10) was chunks of chicken breast marinated in chili, garlic and ginger. The waitress asked if we wanted the dish spicy. Yes, I replied, because most "spicy" food in our local restaurants isn't remotely spicy. This was. It bit back. The chicken had been breaded and fried with additional peppers and garlic. Warning: Have plenty of beer, water and naan on hand to mitigate the heat. I loved it. The goat curry masala ($18) was delicious but hard to eat. The chunks of goat meat were firmly on the bone. The large dish was stew-like and had to be eaten with fingers. Messy. The flavors were a triumph, though: tomatoes, onions, garlic, ginger, coriander, cumin, turmeric, chili powder and cinnamon. It was spicy but not hot on the tongue. The coconut fish curry ($16) had been cooked in coconut milk and flavored with red curry, garlic, fish, onions and tomatoes. It was a generous portion, again stew-like, and similar to the goat-sauce flavors, but easier to eat. The melt-in the-mouth onion kulcha ($4) was naan baked in the clay oven with spices and onion. I could have made a meal of a basket or two. Bowls of rice appeared with everything, and we were asked if we needed more: a necessity for soaking up the delicious sauces, and a nice gesture. For dessert, we tried the gajar halwa ($5), a warm, sweet combination of carrots and milk. It reminded me of a carrot bread pudding with its rather dense consistency. This is a traditional Punjabi dessert that is served warm or cold. One evening, our waitress convinced us to order a mango lassi ($6), a tropical Indian-style smoothie made with fresh mango and yogurt. It was tasty, but she brought it with the beers we ordered, not a good combination. The waitress was efficient and attentive, perhaps too much so. She delivered and started chatting up the dessert menus when we had not eaten half our entrees. Finally, despite her enthusiasm, she never cleared the main-course dishes. When she delivered the dessert, she merely pushed the dishes aside and made room. Yes, it was casual dining, but the experience could have been improved. Lunch at The Menu is a good deal. First, the variety is excellent: 14 hot trays with meats, fish, and vegetarian dishes, plus a salad bar and house-made soup. All for $11, an easy-to-swallow price. And for those unfamiliar with Indian cuisine, this is an inexpensive way to sample a number of dishes. N
The Menu 2700 W. El Camino Real Mountain View 408-800-6368 themenuindia.com Hours: Buffet lunch weekdays 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; brunch Sat.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; dinner daily 5:30-10 p.m.
Shop Talk
by Daryl Savage
CURRY UP IN; TWO OTHER EATERIES OUT ... Add Miyake and Cafe Renaissance to the growing list of restaurant closings in Palo Alto. Miyake, the noisy, flashy, busy sushi joint at 140 University Ave., ended its decades-long run early last month. And Cafe Renaissance, a Persian eatery at 321 Hamilton Ave., closed its doors on Sept. 21. Scheduled to replace it later this month is Curry Up Now, which will serve Indian street food. The Indian restaurant achieved an almost cult-like following from its food-truck success. Its Facebook page has fans in the thousands. Palo Alto will be its second brick-andmortar building, after the recent success of its first building in San Mateo, which opened last year. ECLECTIC ART SHOP REOPENS ... Diane Master is all about art, whether it's her conversation, her personality or her clothing. As founder of the Gallery Shop, the eclectic little retail store in the Palo Alto Art Center at 1313 Newell Road, she has been the driving force behind the shop, which is in its 19th year. Now that the center has been renovated, the shop has been given more space and a prominent spot in the lobby. "The original shop was put in as an afterthought," Master said. Pointing to the new glass-enclosed contemporary shop, she said: "Here we're talking a different language. This space was planned and anticipated. It's the real deal." Master said she puts 35,000 miles a year on her car trying to find seldom-seen art to stock the store. "I'm everywhere. I'm on a mission. This is my passion," she said. A few of the finds on display from her long-distance driving include a collection of vintage-looking oil cans made from ceramic, inspired by rusted, dented, peeling metal containers. Other items include holiday
ornaments; unusual art supplies for children; handcrafted porcelain dinnerware, cut and decorated to look like doilies; and fine jewelry, almost all of it made in Northern California. ALMA VILLAGE TAKING SHAPE ... Alma Plaza is quickly transforming into Alma Village. Starbucks opened this week and Miki's Farm Fresh Market, which is modeled after the popular Berkeley Bowl supermarket, is tentatively scheduled to open Oct. 17. Developer John McNellis said he was thrilled with the rapid and smooth construction of the Palo Alto project, which also includes housing, after more than 15 years of planning and neighborhood meetings. "At long, long last, we are almost there. We're just looking forward to the day that all of our homes are sold and occupied, our apartments are rented and our retail shops are happily open for business." N
Heard a rumor about your favorite store or business moving out, or in, down the block or across town? Daryl Savage will check it out. Email shoptalk@ paweekly.com.
PENINSULA
Reservations Credit cards Lot parking Beer & wine Takeout Highchairs Wheelchair
access
Banquet Catering Outdoor seating Noise level: Low Bathroom Cleanliness: Excellent
Discover the best places to eat this week!
AMERICAN CHINESE
Armadillo Willy's
941-2922 1031 N. San Antonio Road, Los Altos www.armadillowillys.com
Chef Chu's
948-2696 1067 N. San Antonio Road www.chefchu.com
The Old Pro
326-1446 541 Ramona Street, Palo Alto www.oldpropa.com STEAKHOUSE
Ming's
856-7700 1700 Embarcadero East, Palo Alto www.mings.com
New Tung Kee Noodle House
947-8888 520 Showers Drive, Mountain View www.shopmountainview.com/luunoodlemv INDIAN
Sundance the Steakhouse
321-6798 1921 El Camino Real, Palo Alto www.sundancethesteakhouse.com
Janta Indian Restaurant
Read and post reviews, explore restaurant menus, get hours and directions and more at ShopPaloAlto, ShopMenloPark and ShopMountainView 462-5903 369 Lytton Ave. www.jantaindianrestaurant.com
Thaiphoon
323-7700 543 Emerson Ave, Palo Alto www.ThaiphoonRestaurant.com
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Movies
OPENINGS
Young Victor and his dog in "Frankenweenie."
MOVIE TIMES
All showtimes are for Friday through Sunday only unless otherwise noted. For other times, as well as reviews and trailers, go to PaloAltoOnline.com/movies. 2016: Obama's America (PG) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 2:05 & 7:20 p.m. Arbitrage (R) ((( Aquarius Theatre: 1, 3:30, 6 & 8:30 p.m. The Black Cat (1934) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Fri.-Sun. at 7:30 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. also at 4:50 p.m. Bolshoi Ballet: La Sylphide (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Century 20: Sun. at noon; Tue. at 7 p.m. Palo Alto Square: Sun. at noon; Tue. at 7 p.m. Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Aquarius Theatre: 2:45, 5, 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Dredd (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: In 3D Fri. & Sat. at 10:15 p.m.; In 3D Sun. at 9:50 p.m. Century 20: 11:55 a.m. & 4:55 p.m.; In 3D at 2:25, 7:30 & 9:50 p.m. End of Watch (R) ((1/2 Century 16: 12:20, 3:30 & 7 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 10:05 p.m.; Sun. also at 9:40 p.m. Century 20: 11:35 a.m.; 2:15, 5, 7:35 & 10:20 p.m. Finding Nemo 3D (G) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:10 a.m. & 4:30 p.m. (standard 2D); In 3D at 1:50 & 7:15 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 10:15 p.m. (standard 2D); Sun. also at 9:55 p.m. (standard 2D) Century 20: 2:20, 7:20 & 9:55 p.m. (standard 2D); In 3D at 11:50 a.m. & 4:50 p.m. Frankenweenie (PG) ((( Century 16: 11:20 a.m.; 1:40, 4:10 & 6:40 p.m.; In 3D at noon, 2:30, 5:10 & 7:40 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 9:10 p.m.; In 3D Fri. & Sat. also at 10:10 p.m.; Sun. also at 8:55 p.m.; In 3D Sun. also at 9:55 p.m. Century 20: 12:20, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25 & 9:45 p.m.; In 3D at 11:20 a.m.; 1:40, 3:55, 6:10, 8:25 & 10:35 p.m. Gone With the Wind (1939) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: Wed. at 2 & 7 p.m. Century 20: Wed. at 2 & 7 p.m. Hotel Transylvania (PG) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11 a.m.; 1:30, 4:20 & 7:10 p.m.; In 3D at 11:40 a.m.; 2, 5:10 & 7:50 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 9:45 p.m.; In 3D Fri. & Sat. also at 10:30 p.m.; Sun. also at 9:30 p.m.; In 3D Sun. also at 10:10 p.m. Century 20: 11:20 a.m.; 1:45, 4:05, 6:30 & 8:55 p.m.; In 3D at 12:45, 3:10, 5:35, 8 & 10:25 p.m. House at the End of the Street (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 20: 12:25, 2:55, 5:25, 7:55 & 10:30 p.m. Looper (R) (((1/2 Century 16: 11 & 11:40 a.m.; 1:45, 2:30, 4:30, 5:20, 7:35, 8:40 & 10:30 p.m. Century 20: 11:15 a.m.; 12:35, 2, 3:20, 4:45, 6:15, 7:50, 9:05 & 10:40 p.m. The Master (R) (((1/2 Century 20: 12:50, 3:50, 6:55 & 10:10 p.m. Guild Theatre: 1:45, 5 & 8:15 p.m. The Mummy (1932) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Fri.-Sun. at 6:05 & 8:45 p.m. Murders in the Rue Morgue (1931) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Wed. & Thu. at 6:15 & 8:45 p.m. The Oranges (R) (Not Reviewed) Palo Alto Square: 4:45 & 7:25 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 2:15 & 9:45 p.m.; Sun. also at 2 p.m. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 11:30 a.m.; 12:30, 1:55, 3:10, 4:45, 6:10, 7:30 & 8:50 p.m. Century 20: 11:30 a.m.; 12:30, 1:55, 3, 4:30, 5:30, 7:05, 8:05, 9:40 & 10:35 p.m. Pitch Perfect (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 11:05 a.m.; 1:45, 4:40 & 7:40 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 10:30 p.m.; Sun. also at 10:20 p.m. Century 20: 11:45 a.m.; 2:25, 3:45, 5:05, 6:25, 7:45, 9:10 & 10:25 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 1:05 p.m. The Raven (1935) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Wed. & Thu. at 7:30 p.m. Robot & Frank (PG-13) ((( Palo Alto Square: 7:15 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 2 p.m. The Rocky Horror Picture Show (R) (Not Reviewed) Guild Theatre: Sat. at midnight. Ruby Sparks (R) (((1/2 Palo Alto Square: 4:30 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 9:30 p.m. Taken 2 (PG-13) (1/2 Century 16: 11 & 11:50 a.m.; 12:40, 1:20, 2:10, 3, 4, 5, 5:50, 7, 8, 8:50, 9:50 & 10:30 p.m. Century 20: 11:40 a.m.; 12:30, 1:20, 2:10, 2:50, 3:40, 4:35, 5:15, 6, 7, 7:40, 8:25, 9:30, 10:05 & 10:45 p.m. Trouble with the Curve (PG-13) (( Century 16: 12:10, 3:20, 6:30 & 9:20 p.m. Century 20: 11:25 a.m.; 2, 4:40, 7:20 & 10 p.m. Won't Back Down (PG) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:15 a.m.; 4:20 & 9:45 p.m. Century 20: 12:50, 3:50, 7:10 & 10:10 p.m.
celebration of cinema, and a heartfelt, central "boy and his dog" story, but it's a pleasant surprise that the picture also goes out of its way to encourage freethinking square pegs to avoid gaping round holes. Rated PG for thematic elements, scary images and action. One hour, 27 minutes. -- Peter Canavese
Taken 2 -1/2
Frankenweenie ---
(Century 16, Century 20) By reaching back into his own past and movie history, the recently fumbly Tim Burton has gotten a grip with "Frankenweenie." Expanded by screenwriter John August from Burton's 1984 live-action short of the same name, the stopmotion-animated "Frankenweenie" finds the filmmaker in fine fettle. Like its predecessors (Burton's short and the 1931 "Frankenstein"), "Frankenweenie" plays out in blackand-white. Bold, man, bold. For Disney to put out a 2012 animated 3D family picture in black-and-white can mean only one thing: The megahit "Alice in Wonderland" wasn't a complete waste after all. It allowed studio bosses to trust their artist in residence enough to look past the chiaroscuro and see green. The story concerns young Victor Frankenstein (Charlie Tahan), reimagined as a child of suburbia. New Holland is a town that's happily set in its ways, from local holiday "Dutch Day" to traditional lessons in the schoolroom. Give them that old-time religion; it's good enough for them. As such, these `burbs are no place for Victor, a curious child who takes to his science class in a spirit of experimentation. Science comes in handy when Victor's beloved dog Sparky dies, necessitating electrical resuscitation. Flipping the cautionary themes of Mary Shelley's original source material, "Frankenweenie" plays out as a primarily pro-science parable. August establishes a plain conflict between the self-servingly narrowminded status quo and the socially progressive attitude represented by Victor's heavily accented science teacher Mr. Rzykruski (a terrific Martin Landau), who bluntly addresses the school's parents as "ignorant" and "stupid," and tells Victor, "They like what science gives them, but not the questions, no." Rzykruski stands as the exception to the film's rule, expressed by Victor's dad, that "Sometimes adults don't know what they're talking about." Obviously, that's a message kids are ready to hear. Parents shouldn't take offense (Victor's parents are as loving as they are clueless). If anything, it's cat lovers who will be miffed, given the sinister weirdness of local feline Mr. Whiskers (three words: psychic cat scat). Trappings like Mr. Whiskers help August and Burton to fill out the story, which winds up playing on the science-fiction horrors of `50s cinema when Victor's peers step up the Science Fair competition. No points for the character who's a squinting Communist Chinese stereotype, but Burton and his voice cast (including Martin Short and Catherine O'Hara in multiple delightful roles) justifiably have a ball bringing new life to the likes of Vincent Price, Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff. Along with the 3D goose, "Frankenweenie" boasts Burton's distinctive design work, and creatively eager stop-motion work (check out the streaking raindrop shadows, evocative of Conrad Hall's cinematography for "In Cold Blood"). Of course "Frankenweenie" offers eye candy, a
(Century 16, Century 20) Here's a little test: How can you identify the villain in "Taken 2," the sequel to Liam Neeson's surprise-hit 2008 action thriller? Well, there's a suspicious-looking character who tells Liam Neeson's retired CIA operative Bryan Mills, "Don't play the hero with me." What is this guy, un-American? Oh yeah, that too: crime lord Murad Hoxha is Albanian, and played by Rade Serbedzija, eternally pigeonholed as the go-to, all-purpose Euro-baddie. Also there's the part about spilling Mills' blood on the same ground as Hoxha's dearly departed son, killed by Mills in "Taken." "Very funny," you sneer. "What kind of test is this? Obviously, Hoxha is the villain." But with the screenplay's half-serious irony -- the only interesting area into which "Taken 2" dizzily staggers -- the villain could just as well be Mills. The "Taken" movies define Mills by the intersection of his total commitment to family and his fiercely leonine ultra-competence as a man of action ("When you give," his ex-wife enthuses, "it's 100 percent of 100 percent"). He terminates with extreme prejudice, but only in defense of self and family, so it's all good. Turn the story 180 degrees, though, and Hoxha acts not too dissimilar to Mills. Enraged that a foreigner would blithely kill "sons and grandsons, fathers and husbands" and think he could get away with it, Hoxha relentlessly pursues his own justice. (And, yes, as per the law of the playground, he started it.) Since Mills offers a last-minute invite to his ex (Famke Janssen) and their daughter Kim (Maggie Grace) to join him on a business trip to Istanbul, Hoxha gets a shot at teaching the American that turnabout is fair play. As written by "Taken" screenwriters Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen and directed by the selfchristened Olivier Megaton, "Taken 2" certainly underlines the fact that the American family lives in the lap of luxury, whether it's an L.A. manse or deluxe Istanbul hotel accommodations. But despite light teasing about our blinkered American entitlement, this movie has about as much intellectual value as a turnip. Obviously, no one goes to "Taken 2" for an allegory of international relations, and it should be said that the picture plunks down 90 stupid but ruthlessly efficient minutes. As a writer-producer, Besson is particularly mercenary. Knowing well his audience for these blood-simple actioners, he ticks off a rooftop chase, car chase, a handful of mano-a-mano clashes and multiple crashes and explosions. But the ludicrous plot devices that allow Mills to go from point A to point Z insult the intelligence of the character and the audience. This film has no more plot (in fact, probably less) than the average video game, and what's here amounts to the "Spy Kids" version of the first film (this time, the whole family goes into action!). As for Megaton, he's not so much "the bomb" as a dud: The all-important action proves clumsy in staging and choppy in editing. By the climax that pats "us" all on the back for being better than "them," we'll relate to Mills' conclusion: "I'm tired of it all." Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, and some sensuality. One hour, 31 minutes. -- Peter Canavese
( Skip it (( Some redeeming qualities ((( A good bet (((( Outstanding
Aquarius: 430 Emerson St., Palo Alto (266-9260) Century Cinema 16: 1500 N. Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View (800-326-3264) Century 20 Downtown: 825 Middlefield Road, Redwood City (800-326-3264) Cin�Arts at Palo Alto Square: 3000 El Camino Real, Palo Alto (493-3456) Guild: 949 El Camino Real, Menlo Park (266-9260) Stanford: 221 University Ave., Palo Alto (324-3700) Internet address: For show times, plot synopses, trailers and more information about films playing, go to PaloAltoOnline.com/movies
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Movies
NOW PLAYING
The following is a sampling of movies recently reviewed in the Weekly:
Arbitrage --(Aquarius) The "having it all" lifestyle of the CEO played by Richard Gere in "Arbitrage" may not be very relatable, but his nightmare scenario of losing it all should ring a bell. Gere's smugly successful Robert Miller holds court, all smiles, at the office and at home. But he becomes shaken when facing involuntary manslaughter charges after crashing his luxury sedan. He ropes in Jimmy Grant, a young black man (Nate Parker) to assist him in fleeing the scene of the crime. "Arbitrage" is at its most interesting when exploring the choices facing Miller and Grant when the police identify the younger man and begin turning the screws on him. Mostly unspoken, but loud and clear as subtext, are the matters of race and white privilege.At its essence, the film is a potboiler, heating up with tension as Miller finds his lies catching up with him. Before the film arrives at its foregone conclusion, the director succeeds in giving his thriller enough thematic texture to set it apart, and his star a showcase that reminds us of Gere's ability. Playing a character that's almost entirely unsympathetic, Gere demonstrates the charm that's allowed Miller to accumulate his wealth and status, and the abyss-staring his showmanship conceals. Rated R for language, violent images and drug use. One hour, 48 minutes. -- Peter Canavese
disturbing images, pervasive language including sexual references, and some drug use. One hour, 49 minutes. -- P.C. (Reviewed Sept. 21, 2012)
Looper ---1/2 (Century 16, Century 20) Of all the projects Joseph Gordon-Levitt has been involved with, "Looper" may well be the one to launch him into superstardom. The picture takes place in the year 2044, 30 years before the invention of time travel. The mob seems to have a stranglehold on the advanced technology, using time travel to send people back to the year 2044 for termination by highly paid Loopers like Joe (Gordon-Levitt). Occasionally the mob will send back the older version of the Loopers themselves to "close the loop," When Joe's older self (Bruce Willis) appears in the year 2044 and young Joe can't pull the trigger, older Joe escapes. The episode sets off a hunt-and-chase that ropes in brassy farmer Sara (Emily Blunt) and her young son Cid (Pierce Gagnon in a spotlight-stealing performance). Director Rian Johnson ("Brick") demonstrates a deft touch and infuses "Looper" with subtleties and soulful moments. Gordon-Levitt nails Willis' mannerisms, so it's easy to believe the two are versions of the same person, and showcases his depth with toughness and compassion. Blunt is also remarkably good as a protective mother, and youngster Gagnon is a revelation. The visual effects underwhelm at times, but the story doesn't suffer. Ultimately, "Looper" is a thoughtful genrebender that brings science-fiction, action and mystery together in one tight package. Rated R for strong violence, drug content, sexuality/nudity and language. 1 hour, 59 minutes. -- T.H. (Reviewed Sept. 28, 2012) The Master ---1/2 (Guild, Century 20) "The Master" puts its primary focus on an unstoppable forcemeets-immovable object war of wills between two men. Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix) returns home from World War II psychologically damaged and struggles to reintegrate into American daily life. His "nervous condition" leads him deep into drink, trouble and eventually The Cause, a cultish organization created and lorded over by Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman). Dodd sees something in Freddie, recognizes his pliability, finds him amusing, useful and perhaps attractive. The Cause, modeled on early Scientology, offers vague direction but charismatic leadership in its L. Ron Hubbard-esque
leader. Director Paul Thomas Anderson makes the audience work hard for coherence and meaning, and some will find their patience sorely tested by his elliptical approach. The film's unequivocal pleasures are its photography, brilliant period production design, and the performances by Phoenix and Hoffman. Drawn and stooped, Phoenix wields a Brando-esque spontaneity capable of eruptive force of feeling and physicality. Hoffman's Dodd, though more canny and confident, appears to be "making all this up as he goes along" and likewise harbors mercurial moodiness. Anderson's risks don't always pay off; they haven't all come out in the wash of the editing room. But "The Master" begs for a reorientation of the viewer, perhaps requiring more than one viewing of the film. There's nothing easy or conventional about this account of a doomed search for external meaning, doubling as a meditative tone poem on human frailty. Rated R for strong bloody violence, language and some sexuality/nudity. Two hours, 17 minutes. -- P.C. (Reviewed Sept. 21, 2012)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower --(Century 16, Century 20) In "Wallflower," novelist Stephen Chbosky directs a revealing film based on his own semiautobiographical book. Witness specimen Charlie (Logan Lerman) -- seen here entering the mating grounds of Mill Grove High School outside Pittsburgh in the early `90s -- little understanding the pull that will lead him to join a pack, gravitate to his cool English teacher, fall for an unavailable female of the species, make mix tapes, have late-night "deep thought" epiphanies, and participate in ancient teenage rituals involving drugs, alcohol and/or "The Rocky Horror Picture Show." Charlie is painfully shy, sensitive to the pain in everyone around him, and inclined to lick the wounds of earlier tangles with predators. He is accepted by the impulsive seniors of the pack: attractive potential mate Sam (Emma Watson) and gay Patrick (Ezra Miller), the latter performing that rare and complex dance of flamboyance, deception, confusion, fear and desire like a junior Oscar Wilde. One cannot blame our sentimental filmmaker or even you, gentle viewer, for seeing in these younglings something of ourselves. Rated PG-13 for mature thematic material, drug and alcohol use, sexual content and a fight; all involving teens. One hour, 43 minutes. -- P.C. (Reviewed Sept. 28, 2012)
Pitch Perfect --(Century 20) "Pitch Perfect" is a bigscreen boon for the "Glee" crowd, and fans of last year's breakthrough hit "Bridesmaids" will appreciate a similar feminine energy in "Pitch." Barden University's all-female a cappella group the Bellas blew its shot at winning the state championship when singer Aubrey (Anna Camp) lost her lunch on stage. Enter Beca (Anna Kendrick), a fiercely independent freshman who has more experience creating musical mash-ups on her laptop than singing a cappella, who joins the group. Big props to director Jason Moore for maintaining an upbeat atmosphere and getting the most from his talented cast. Kendrick is especially good, demonstrating both comedic and dramatic skills, and Rebel Wilson virtually steals the show with her hilarious portrayal. There is certain predictability to the plot, and Beca's romantic story occasionally feels strained. Still, the quirky characters and clever dialogue help absolve other cinematic sins. So far, "Pitch Perfect" takes the baton as the feel-good movie of the year. Rated PG-13 for sexual material, language and drug references. 1 hour, 52 minutes. -- T.H. (Reviewed Sept. 28) Robot & Frank --(Palo Alto Square) In "Robot & Frank," a robot helps a fading old man to see life, and himself, more clearly. The robot is a gift from son (James Marsden) to father (Frank Langella), intended to troubleshoot the dementia of retired "second-story man" Frank. Frank's initial reaction -- "You're going to leave me with this death machine?" -- turns to opportunism when he realizes that the robot isn't programmed to be law-abiding or moralistic: Its only concern is Frank's mental and physical health. And so Frank makes the case that the best way to keep his mind active isn't the gardening the robot proposes, but planning burglaries. The film operates on a humble scale, with small gestures of futurism and an uncluttered visual and narrative style. There's a deftly handled subplot involving the local librarian (Susan Sarandon), who takes an interest in Frank. And there's some good humor in the robot/Frank relationship to counterbalance the poignancy of his fading days. Though the audience may be tempted to humanize the robot (Peter Sarsgaard), the film excels most as a showcase for the still-crafty, supremely human Langella. Whether being grumpy
or sly or existentially fretful, Langella makes a great case for the power of the screen to be a looking glass. Rated PG13 for language. One hour, 30 minutes. -- P.C. (Reviewed Aug. 24, 2012)
Trouble with the Curve -(Century 16, Century 20) Slogging through the first 75 minutes of "Trouble with the Curve" is akin to watching a scoreless baseball game that doesn't get exciting until the ninth inning. The film is often ponderous and dreary, and undertones of soft piano or guitar further dull the pacing. Several solid performances and the presence of Clint Eastwood offer some relief. Eastwood growls and grumbles through his performance as Gus, a baseball scout whose advancing age is taking its toll. When Gus is sent off to scout a potential top draft pick, his daughter Mickey (Amy Adams) tags along and keep an eye on him. Mickey has her own reasons for taking the trip, namely to find why he seemingly abandoned her after the death of her mother. Eastwood's age is showing, but he still has the gravitas to carry a film. While he plays it gruff throughout, he does show a sensitive side in one scene. Speaking to his wife's tombstone, he begins to softly sing to her, choking back tears. "Trouble" represents the directorial debut of longtime Eastwood collaborator Robert Lorenz, who worked alongside Eastwood on "Million Dollar Baby," "Absolute Power" and a slew of other pictures. But Lorenz's freshman effort is more foul tip than base hit. Rated PG-13 for language, sexual references, thematic material and smoking. 1 hour, 51 minutes. -- T.H. (Reviewed
End of Watch --1/2 (Century 16, Century 20) Were I 13 years old, "End of Watch" might well be my new favorite movie. David Ayer's new shoot'em-up buddy-cop flick has a macho exterior and a heart of gold, in its banter, kinetic gunfights and aww-shucks love stories. As such, it's a perfectly diverting time-waster. But the milieu "End of Watch" introduces as "Once upon a time in South Central" may feel a bit old hat. Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pena star as Brian Taylor and Mike Zavala, two of the best cops on the street, and though they may be unconventional, they knuckle down right quick when the situation gets serious. Most importantly, these guys care deeply, about their work, their women, and each other -- though they're more inclined to prove the latter in actions than in words. As written and directed by Ayer, the film's primary stylistic move is to have the action "captured" by small consumer cameras, including one secreted on Taylor's person. Taylor's desire to be a detective pushes the duo to overstep their bounds, one bust ruffling feathers within law enforcement and setting off a powerful Mexican cartel. The danger climaxes in an urban gun battle, the last in a series of adrenaline fixes that include a car chase and a home fire. The film has its own kind of broadly drawn archetypes, and an irrepressible sense of "how about this?" flash that's at odds with its "verite" approach. "R" rating aside, "End of Watch" blends the nastiness and innocence of a playground game of "Cops and Robbers." Rated R for strong violence, some
Century Theatres at Palo Alto Square
Fri & Sat 10/5-10/6 The Oranges- 2:15, 4:45, 7:25, 9:45 Robot & Frank - 2:00,7:15 Ruby Sparks - 4:30, 9:30 Sun 10/ 7 The Oranges- 2:15, 4:45, 7:25 Robot & Frank - 7:15 Ruby Sparks - 4:30 Mon 10/8 The Oranges- 2:15, 4:45, 7:25 Robot & Frank - 2:00, 7:15 Ruby Sparks - 4:30 Tues 10/9 The Oranges- 2:15, 4:45, 7:25 Robot & Frank - 2:00 Wed & Thurs The Oranges- 2:15, 4:45, 7:25 10/10-10/11 Robot & Frank - 2:00, 7:15 Ruby Sparks - 4:30
Tickets and Showtimes available at cinemark.com
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Sports Shorts
PREP ALUMS . . . Santa Clara University keeper Larry Jackson has helped the Broncos post three consecutive shutout victories, and four-straight wins overall. On Monday, CollegeSportsMadness.com named Jackson its West Coast Player of the Week in men's soccer. Jackson, a senior from East Palo Alto, had eight saves last weekend while keeping preseason WCC favorite San Diego and LMU off the scoreboard en route to a pair of SCU wins. The points were important for a Bronco team that began the season 1-4-0, but is now off to a 2-0-0 start in league play . . . Menlo School grad Jerry Rice Jr. saw some significant playing time for UCLA in its 42-14 Pac-12 victory over Colorado on Saturday, catching three passes for 30 yards. The opportunity opened up for Rice when starting wide receiver Devin Lucien broke his clavicle. He'll be out eight to 10 weeks after having surgery this week . . . Castilleja grad Brenna Nelsen shot rounds of 77-77-73 to help Harvard finish second at the Nittany Lion Invitational on Sunday in University Park, Pa. Nelsen's 73 on the final day helped the Crimson shoot a single day school record of 4-under-par 284. Nelsen and her teammates next will compete at the Stanford Invitational on Oct. 19 . . . Former Gunn High standout Medhi Ballouchy of the San Jose Earthquakes will be lost for the remainder of the season after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee during Saturday's match against FC Dallas . . . Senior Allison Whitson from Palo Alto tied a career high in kills, but UC Davis was unable to protect a 2-1 match lead in a five-set Big West Conference loss to Cal State Fullerton on Saturday night. Whitson led UC Davis with 24 kills to match her previous best, set against Utah Valley earlier this season. In Cambridge, Mass., Castilleja grad Taylor Docter had back-to-back matches of double digits as the Crimson split a pair of Ivy League matches on the weekend. On Friday, Docter had 18 kills and 12 digs in a five-set loss to Princeton. On Saturday, Docter finished with 14 kills and 10 digs as Harvard (1-2, 4-10) won its first league match with a triumph over Penn.
STANFORD FOOTBALL
A chance to be memorable
Cardinal will celebrate homecoming on a day it has been unbeatable
H
Stanford quarterback Josh Nunes, who competed less than 50 percent of his passes in a 17-13 loss at Washington last week, needs to be much better Saturday when the Cardinal hosts Arizona at noon in a homecoming game.
by Rick Eymer istory shows that October 6 holds special significance for the Stanford football program as the perhaps the most memorable date. The team's 2007 upset of No. 2 ranked USC -- now recognized as one of the greatest college football upsets of all time -- cemented that date as the most hallowed one on the Stanford football calendar. In the past 40 years, not only has Stanford won each time it has played a football game on October 6, the nature of each Cardinal win on that date has been truly remarkable. Stanford hopes to add to that legacy this Saturday in its homecoming game against Arizona in Stanford Stadium at noon. For No. 18 Stanford (1-1, 3-1) to make it a memorable day again, quarterback Josh Nunes, tight end Levine Toilolo and wide receiver Ty Montgomery will need rebound games. All three are more than capable of responding with huge games. Stanford, however, will have to be much better than it was in last week's 17-13 Pac-12 Conference loss at Washington, a setback Cardinal coach David Shaw said belonged to everybody. "It's time we put it all together,"
(continued on next page)
Stephen Brasher/isiphotos.com
PREP WATER POLO
The tide is turning in the Titans' favor
After years of being an also-ran, Gunn girls are now chasing titles while hoping to make waves in CCS
by Keith Peters or many years, the Palo AltoGunn rivalry in girls' water polo wasn't much of one. The teams did play each other, but the results were predictable as the Vikings sailed to victories. Starting in 2000, Palo Alto beat Gunn 11 straight times. The second time the teams met in 2009, however, the streak finally ended and things haven't been quite the same since. Mark Hernandez was on board as head coach in 2009 and helped turn what had been a moribund program into a respectable one. Prior to his arrival, the Titans had never advanced past the first round of the Central Coast Section playoffs and, from 2000 to 2007, had missed them altogether. Under Hernandez, Gunn not only ended its lengthy losing streak to Paly, but reached the CCS quarterfinals. In 2010 and `11, Gunn reached the
ON THE AIR
Friday
Women's soccer: Stanford at Utah, 1 p.m.; Pac-12 Networks Women's volleyball: Oregon at Stanford, 5:30 p.m.; Pac-12 Networks; KZSU (90.1 FM) Prep football: Aragon at MenloAtherton, 6:45 p.m. (pre-game); KCEA (89.1 FM)
F
Saturday
Men's water polo: USC at Stanford, 9 a.m.; Pac-12 Networks College football: Arizona at Stanford, noon; Fox (2); KNBR (1050 AM); KZSU (90.1 FM)
Sunday
Women's volleyball: Oregon St. at Stanford, 2 p.m.; Pac-12 Networks; KZSU (90.1 FM)
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www.PASportsOnline.com
section semifinals -- losing to the eventual champion each time. The turnaround can be attributed to a number of factors. Having a full-time, on-campus teacher/coach like Hernandez helped. Finally getting a new pool also was a huge improvement, as was getting players involved year round in aquatics -- fall water polo, spring swimming and summer water polo. "They have about a month off in the fall, but that's it," Hernandez said. A stable coaching staff was another big factor, as was an upgraded schedule and victories over teams like Paly and Los Altos. "Slaying the dragon really helped," Hernandez explained. "Los Altos had been a big nemesis for us every year." The dragon officially was felled last season when Gunn beat the Ea(continued on page 34)
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Bob Drebin
Gunn junior Caroline Anderson (right) has been the go-to offensive player for the Titans this season.
by Rick Eymer oy Perkins learned how to swim when he was 12 years old. He was setting American records by the time he was 13. Five years later he became a Paralympic medalist. Perkins, born without hands and feet, exemplifies the devotion to a sport and to the leading of an extraordinary life. At age 22, the Stanford junior won four medals at the 2012 London Parlympic Games. He won two medals at the 2008 Beijing Games. Those are in addition to his six World Championship and Pan Am medals won in 2006 and 2010. This is no ordinary athlete. "I've met a lot of kids over the years who Roy Perkins swim," Perkins said. "I enjoy following them, seeing how they are doing. I'd like to see more people recruited for the Paralympics." Perkins, born in Washington D.C., attended The Bishop's School in San Diego, where he competed for the school's swimming team for a short time. Since becoming a swimmer, Perkins works out about two hours a day, usually with a club team. He has worked out with Stanford on occasion, but normally sticks with the Palo Alto Stanford Aquatics club team, working under the direction of Scott Shea. 4HEREWERE0ARALYMPICATH-
Stanford Olympians have their day as life returns to normal (sort of)
letes in London over the summer, Maggie Steffens, Annika Dries THELARGESTCONTINGENTYETINTHETH and Melissa Seidemann each resuch Games. Perkins finished with turned with a gold medal after helptwo silver medals and a bronze med- ing the United States women's water al. He won a gold medal in 2008. polo team win the top prize in Lon"I think the attention it brings don for the first time ever. to kids is a good thing," Steffens is currently the Perkins said. "I was influgreatest offensive player enced by Melanie Bend, in the world after leading who had a similar disabilall Olympians in goals ity." (21) in London. She set There's no question Peran Olympic record with kins has influenced others. seven goals in one match. He gets to see kids wherSynchronized swimmer ever he goes. -ARIYA+OROLEVARETURNED "The exposure is great for her final year at Stanand it has drawn a lot of FORD GYMNAST +RISTINA attention to the Paralym- Mariya Koroleva Vaculik returns for her pics," Perkins said of athsophomore year, while letes such as Oscar Pistorius, the track athlete Steven Solomon and double amputee who competed in Steffens are making their collegiate both the Olympics and Paralym- debuts. pics in track and field. "It's a great Solomon competed for Austrastory." lia, making the finals in the men's Perkins took a year off from METERS AND 6ACULIK HELPED school to focus on his trainCanada to a surprising ing for London. He recently fifth-place finish in team declared his major as Earth competition. Systems, which can be a lot The water polo players of things beside environdrew thousands of fans mental. when making appearHe's looking forward to ances in the U.S., and the next World Championthat included a sold out ship meet and a chance to Avery Aquatic Center add a few more medals to over the summer in an his collection at the 2016 exhibition game against Rio de Janeiro Games. Kristina Vaculik Hungary. Perkins was one of sevEast Bay residents eral Olympic athletes who returned Steffens and Seidemann, in parto normal student life last week at ticular, get noticed when walking Stanford and took part in an Olym- around town. pic Day. He'll join a large contingent "Some kids, and parents, will run of Stanford Olympians to be hon- up and say `are you Maggie Stefored during halftime at Saturday's fens?' and get so excited," Steffens Stanford-Arizona football game at said. "That's a lot of fun." Stanford Stadium. Added Seidemann: "We can reford, the Cardinal is looking for a victory on Saturday any way it can get it -- especially after the disappointing effort in Seattle. "It's not the end of the world," Stanford senior nose guard Terrence Stephens said. "After a loss you get up and be a man about it. You don't sulk it. There's no room to step backward." That was a sentiment shared by most of his teammates. "You come back every single week and you have to play another game. You have to prepare the next week like you did before," Cardinal linebacker Shayne Skov said. "We have been a sound team." And what about this Arizona team? The Wildcats average nearly 35 points a game and 538.2 offensive yards per contest. "They do a good job keeping the ball between the running back and the quarterback," Skov said. "It's a little annoying when teams are going sideline to sideline. It's like basketball on grass." Senior tight end Zach Ertz continues to be a shining light after recording a career-high 106 yards on six catches against the Huskies. He's the team leader with 15 receptions (with Montgomery) and 252 reception yards. There's nothing wrong with Stanford's defense either. It still leads the Pac -12 in rushing defense (65.2) and is second in scoring defense (15.2). N
CELEBRATING STANFORD'S OLYMPIANS
Being honored during halftime ceremonies of Stanford's homecoming football game Saturday against Arizona will be this representative group of Cardinal Olympians.
John Gall (Baseball) Andrew (A.J.) Hinch (Baseball) Barbra Fontana (Beach volleyball) Christine Thorburn (Cycling) Katrin Tobin (Cycling, alternate) Kristian Ipsen (Diviing) Cassidy Krug (Diving) Nina Ligon (Equestrian) Alexander Massialas (Fencing) Kent Mitchell (Rowing) Eleanor Logan (Rowing) David Banks (Rowing) Ted Huang (Sailing) Rachel Buehler (Soccer) Jeff Kostoff (Swimming) Marybeth Dorst (Swimming) Bridget Finn (Swimming) Wade Flemons (Swimming) John Moffet (Swimming) Edward Parenti (Swimming) John Simons (Swimming) David Sims (Swimming) Dana Kirk (Swimming) James Gaughran (Swimming, water polo) Brian Job (Swimming) Anthony Mosse (Swimming) Julia Smit (Swimming) Sharon Clark (Swimming) Elaine (Breeden) Penrose (Swimming) Anne Cribbs (Swimming) Linda Wittwer (Swimming) Roy Perkins (Paralympic swimming) Pablo Morales (Swimming) Maria Koroleva (Synchronized swimming) Erin McGregor (Synchronized swimming) Courtenay Stewart (Synchronized swimming) Alex O'Brien (Tennis) Nancy Ditz (Track and field) Jackie Edwards (Track and field) Brad Hauser (Track and field) Katerina Stefanidi (Track and field) Steven Solomon (Track and field) Chryste Gaines (Track and field) Gabe Gardner (Volleyball) Kristin (Klein) Keefe (Volleyball) Ogonna Nnamani (Volleyball) Jon Root (Volleyball) Jody Campbell (Water polo) Annika Dries (Water polo) Alison Gregorka (Water polo) Alan Mouchawar (Water polo) Gary Sheerer (Water polo) Chris Dorst (Water polo) Erich Fischer (Water polo) John Tanner (Water polo, coach) Melissa Seidemann (water polo) Maggie Steffens (water polo) Brenda Villa (water polo)
R
late to the process. We went to the same schools and played for the same teams. That connects the water polo community and that's cool for sure." While Steffens and Dries have their gold medals safely locked up, Seidemann brought hers to school BRIEFLYSO53!COACH!DAM+RIKOrian could show it off to friends during a recent Stanford-UCLA charity golf event. Stanford grad Brenda Villa, who
retired following the Olympics but remains coaching the Castilleja water polo team, helped make it all special for the current Stanford players. "I stood on the podium between her and Heather Petri (who also retired after four Olympics) and I could feel their energy," Seidemann said. "All the hard work the past 20 years ended in a gold medal and I can't think of anything cooler." N
Homecoming
ery caught six passes, but for only 39 yards. Both receivers are supposed to be deep threats capable of catching passes in a crowded end zone. Shaw said. "We will go back to "We can't have as many three and work and put guys in position to outs as we had (Stanford converted succeed. We have to throw the ball five of 18 third downs against Washand we have to catch the ball. It's as ington). We want to be a team that simple as that." can really march down the field," Nunes completed less Nunes said. There is a than 50 percent of his mood of urgency but not passes against the Husto the point we need to kies, though there were rush or overcompensate." several dropped passes, A victory over Arizona particularly deep throws would erase any doubts to Toilolo and Montgomlingering about a team ery. that has BCS bowl game "Every ball he threw expectations. There's still down field was perfect, plenty of time to make a except one," Shaw said. mark. "It's not anything Josh The Wildcats (0-2, 3-2) can't do and hasn't done are coming off a wild 38thousand times. It's a two David Shaw 35 loss to Oregon State minute conversation. He and have their own hismissed one downfield throw, the last tory against Stanford. Until Washone of the game. He has a 6-8 guy ington held the Cardinal offense to he has a wide range of options there. zero touchdowns, it was Arizona, One thing he can't do is throw it too in 2006, which had that distincfar down field." tion. Arizona also held Stanford to Nunes says its simply a matter of its lowest offensive output in school throwing the ball better. history (52 yards) that year. "We're definitely close," he said. It's been a lot different in recent "The pass protection was really years. The teams combined for over good in the game. It's just a matter 1,000 yards in Arizona's win three of upping our completion percent- years ago. Stanford dominated the age. It is something very fixable. past two years to the tune of a comI just need to throw it better. I just bined 79-27 score. Andrew Luck have to get settled in early." threw for a combined 618 yards. The 6-8 Toilolo managed one reWhile history says October 6 proception, and also fumbled. Montgom- vides memorable games for Stan(continued from previous page)
STANFORD'S LEGACY OF OCT. 6 GAMES
Here is a summary of some of the most remarkable and memorable October 6 games, both home and away: 1973 (Champaign, Ill.) Stanford 24, Illinois 0 s3TANFORDSLASTNONCONFERENCE road shutout win. s.EARLYSEASONSHAVEGONE by without a Stanford team equaling that rare nonconference road game achievement. 1979 (Stanford) Stanford 27, UCLA 24 s+EN.ABERKICKEDA
YARD field goal on the last play to win the game for Stanford. The ball hit the left upright as it went through the goalposts, clearing the crossbar by just three feet. s4WO3TANFORDFRESHMENWERE key on the pressure play; the snapper was Mike Teeuws and the holder was John Elway. 1984 (Pasadena) Stanford 20, UCLA 17 s ,ITTLE
USED BACKUP QUARterback Fred Buckley, subbing for injured starter John Paye, steered Stanford to an upset win at the Rose Bowl over a heavily favored UCLA team that would finish 9-3. s!WININ3OUTHERN#ALIFORNIA is always a prize, and was fairly rare in that decade of Stanford football. 1990 (Notre Dame, Ind.) Stanford 36, Notre Dame 31 s &OUR RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS by running back Tommy Vardell helped the Cardinal overturn the nation's top-ranked team at Notre Dame Stadium. "Touchdown Tommy" became a wellknown moniker not only on the Stanford campus but throughout the college football world. 2007 (Los Angeles) Stanford 24, USC 23 s )T WAS 53# IT WAS THE ,OS Angeles Coliseum and it was as David vs. Goliath as any Stanford-USC matchup has ever been. s 0ROGNOSTICATORS HAD BEEN PREDICTING A
POINT 3TANFORD defeat. The game-winning, final-minute, Tavita Pritchard-toMark Bradford touchdown pass has been replayed thousands of times on television and the game earned a prominent spot in the list of all-time upsets in any sport.N � John Platz
��ܰ*>�"i�V�U�*>���7ii��U�"V�Li��x]������U Page 33
Sports
PREP ROUNDUP
ATHLETES OF THE WEEK
Water polo
Showdown looms in volleyball
Paly girls next face Los Gatos, the last team to beat the Vikings
by Keith Peters alo Alto girls' volleyball coach Dave Winn is not one to look past matches. Thus, hosting Los Altos last night was the next important step forward for the Vikings this week. Yet, there is a very big match looming on Tuesday at Los Gatos and Winn likely has that one on his mind. If the Vikings and Wildcats both won on Thursday, they'll be onetwo in the SCVAL De Anza Division heading into their next match in Los Gatos at 6:45 p.m. That showdown was expected to be between two undefeated teams, but Los Gatos was upended by Homestead on Tuesday and fell into a second-place tie with the Mustangs, both at 4-1. Thus, the Vikings were in sole possession of first place heading into the Los Altos match. The last time Paly lost a league match, it was on the road to the Wildcats on Oct. 21, 2010. It was the Vikings' only loss in a 41-1 state championship season. Since then, Paly has won 20 straight division matches. The latest came Tuesday night in San Jose as Paly defeated host Lynbrook, 25-15, 25-19, 25-13, to improve to 5-0 in league (16-3 overall). Bella Graves had eight kills in only nine swings and added three blocks to help spark the two-time defending state champion Vikings. Senior co-captain Shelby Knowles also added eight kills with junior Becca Raffel adding seven. Senior co-captain Sophia Bono finished with 24 assists while junior Keri Gee contributed 12 digs. Elsewhere in SCVAL De Anza Division action, host Gunn snapped a two-match losing streak by handing Mountain View a 20-25, 25-19, 25-21, 27-25 defeat. The Titans improved to 2-3 (9-8 overall). Gunn served up 12 aces, four by libero Mika Munch, while keeping in the thick of the division race. Lena Latour had a match-high 17 kills while Gunn teammate Erica Johnston added 11. In Portola Valley, serving and effective blocking led Menlo School (3-0, 14-5) to a 3-0 victory over host Priory in West Bay Athletic League (Foothill Division) match. Maddie Huber and Maddy Frappier led the attack with 11 kills each in the Knights' 25-20, 25-20, 25-14 victory. Priory libero Michaela Koval had 14 digs for the Panthers (1-2, 14-5). In Atherton, host Sacred Heart Prep got 13 kills and seven blocks from senior Payton Smith in a 2522, 29-27, 25-16 victory over Castilleja in WBAL Foothill Division
P
Marine Hall-Poirier
Priory School
The junior outside hitter had 84 kills during a 5-1 volleyball week, including 24 kills and 11 digs in a win over Castilleja plus 49 kills to help the Panthers go 4-0 and win the Mt. Madonna Invitational title.
Katelyn Doherty
Menlo-Atherton volleyball
Will Runkel
Sacred Heart Prep
The senior water polo goalie had 62 saves during a 5-0 week that included 18 blocks in the championship match of the NCS vs. CCS Challenge as SHP posted a 7-6 win to cap a 4-0 performance in the tournament.
Nick Bisconti
Menlo water polo
Honorable mention
Maddie Huber*
Menlo volleyball
Travis Chambers
Menlo football
Shelby Knowles*
Palo Alto volleyball
Andre Guzman
Gunn football
Kelly Moran
Sacred Heart Prep water polo
Jack Heneghan
Menlo football
Stephanie Swan
Priory volleyball
Michael Holloway
Sacred Heart Prep water polo
Anna Zhou
Gunn golf
Bret Pinsker
Palo Alto water polo * previous winner
To see video interviews of the Athletes of the Week, go to www.PASportsOnline.com
action. Ellie Shannon added nine kills and six blocks while fellow senior Sonia Abuel-Saud finished with seven kills and 10 digs for the Gators (3-0, 18-2). Helen Gannon (15 digs) and fellow senior Cammie Merten (19 assists) also contributed to the Gators' victory. Lucy Tashman led Castilleja (0-3, 11-11) with 11 kills, nine digs and four blocks. In the PAL Bay Division, host Menlo-Atherton (5-0, 12-5) got eight kills from Ally Ostrow and Saane Fakalata in a 25-14, 25-16, 25-21 victory over visiting Hillsdale. The Bears played without injured Ali Spindt and Mele Moimoi (family commitment), but still had plenty of firepower to remain tied for first place with Carlmont. Katelyn Doherty added 20 assists, 17 digs and six kills while Kaitlin Tavarez finished with 16 assists for the Bears. Football Menlo School, Sacred Heart Prep, Gunn and Menlo-Atherton will be looking to keep their winning streaks intact while Palo Alto will be hoping to start one during league matchups on Friday. Sacred Heart Prep (4-0) will open
its PAL Bay Division season against visiting Burlingame at 3 p.m., looking for its first 5-0 start since going 8-0 in 2008. The Panthers, however, have a history of ending SHP streaks, upending the Gators after four wins in 2010 following a bye week by SHP. Coincidently, the Gators had a bye last week. Menlo, coming off a 40-0 nonleague win over Mills, will put its 4-0 mark on the line in a PAL Ocean Division opener on Friday at Woodside at 7 p.m. Menlo-Atherton (2-2) will open PAL Bay Division action Friday (7 p.m.) against visiting Aragon in a battle of possible title contenders. The Bears tuned up with a 13-7 nonleague win over South San Francisco last week. Gunn (1-0, 3-2) will visit Harker on Friday (7:30 p.m.) after beating Lynbrook 20-12, to open the SCVAL El Camino Division season last week. Palo Alto, coming off a 24-19 loss in its SCVAL De Anza Division opener to Milpitas last week, takes a 2-2 overall mark to Homestead on Friday at 7:30 p.m., hoping to gain some momentum with big games coming up against Wilcox and Los Gatos. N
tunately for Hernandez, he got just enough. Defensively, Gunn tried to force Paly to shoot from the outside and gles in the team's second meeting was successful to a point -- LeClerc during the regular season and again got her goal from way outside after in the playoffs while winning both finding herself unguarded. That tied SCVAL De Anza Division titles for the match at 2 in the second quarter. the first time. It remained that way until AnderGunn went 11-1 in league last son scored her only goal with 3:34 season on the way to finishing 21-7, left in the third period. The Titans both the best marks in program his- pulled away from there with sophotory. The Titans, however, are on more goalie Sam Acker making a their way to improving upon both. handful of saves. The Titans' 6-4 victory over host Both teams struggled with their Palo Alto on Tuesday moved Gunn offense, partially due to the defensto 6-0 and atop the division strand- es, and Hernandez acknowledged ings and 10-3 overall. that other players will Since Gunn never has have to be involved in reached the CCS fiorder to take the presnals, there are plenty sure off Anderson, of goals to achieve a junior lefty who this season. can light it up if left "We have a bunch open. of good girls," said And while HerHernandez. "Everynandez was hesitant one is on the same to compare last seapage. We're not as exson with this year, plosive (as last year). he did acknowledge But, this team plays one difference in the well together." squads. It will have to be"Last year's team cause the Titans are probably played its no longer the under- Mark Hernandez best game in Septemdogs in most games. ber, when we lost to The hunter now has become the Campolindo," he said. "This team's hunted. best game should be in November." "I'm not used to coaching that The CCS finals are November way," Hernandez said. 17. Hernandez also has been forced In other girls' water polo action the change the game plan a bit. this week: "That's what so fun about coachMenlo-Atherton got 12 saves ing high school," said Hernandez. from goalie Sierra Sheeper and "You get (and have) to re-invent three goals each from Kiki Canny, yourself every year. This year, for Sophia Caryotakis, Sami Henze and example, we may not have the fire- Jenna Swatz in a 17-9 win over vispower we've had in the past years iting Burlingame to open the PAL -- we lost three of our top four Bay Division season on Wednesday. goal-scorers from last year, includ- Jessica Heilman had nine steals to ing Elizabeth Anderson (now play- help spark the offense. ing for Santa Clara University) -- Castilleja bounced back from a but we're re-defining ourselves as a loss to host Sacred Heart Prep on defensive-minded team." Tuesday with a 17-6 dunking of Gunn turned in a fine defensive visiting Aragon in a PAL Bay Divieffort against Palo Alto while get- sion opener on Wednesday. Stephating its most balanced scoring effort nie Flamen and Fernanda Kramer of the season to beat the Vikings each tallied four goals for the Ga(4-2, 8-7) for the fifth time in the tors (6-4) with Grace Arnold adding past seven meetings. three. Palo Alto did win a battle, holding A day earlier, host Sacred Heart Gunn scoring leader Caroline An- Prep got 10 goalie saves from Kelly derson to just one goal. The Titans, Moran and a pair of goals from Caithowever, got solo goals from Lau- lin Stuewe in a 7-3 nonleague win ren Lesyna, Maggie Sockness, Nia over Castilleja. SHP (9-4) grabbed Gardner and Erica Watkins -- plus a 5-1 halftime lead, blanking the a goal from Paly -- in pulling out visitors in the first and third perithe important victory. ods. Anna Yu tallied a pair of goals The own goal came in the fourth for Castilleja.. quarter with Gunn holding a 4-2 Also in Atherton, Kaelen Dunn lead. Anderson had the ball in scored five goals and Audrey Flower front of the Paly cage, before it got added four, but it still wasn't enough knocked loose and then inadvertent- as host Menlo School dropped a 12ly swept into the cage by the Paly 10 decision to Mercy-Burlingame goalie. in PAL Ocean Division play. The The Vikings bounced back and Knights (4-2, 5-5) fell behind by 7-2 made it 5-3 on senior Martine at halftime before putting on a late LeClerc's second goal, but Watkins rally that fell short. provided some insurance with a goal from outside with 2:45 left. Paly's Boys' water polo Tara Lawrence found the cage with Menlo-Atherton opened its PAL 2:25 to play for a 6-4 match, but Bay Division season with a 17-5 Gunn's defense stiffened and con- dunking of visiting Burlingame on trolled play the rest of the way. Wednesday. Zach Cogan, Zach Deal Paly did a good job of limiting and Harrison Holland-McCowan Anderson's offense by double-team- all scored three goals for the Bears ing the junior nearly every time she (1-0, 7-7). touched the ball. Lesyna also drew On Tuesday: attention from two of three Paly With senior Bret Pinsker scoring defenders at the 2-meter position, forcing other Titans to step up. For(continued on next page)
(continued from page 32)
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Sports
(continued from previous page)
five goals, host Palo Alto handed rival Gunn a 17-7 defeat in SCVAL De Anza Division action. The Vikings (4-2, 10-4), coming off a 4-0 finish in the lower division of the NCS vs. CCS Challenge last weekend, pulled away from a onegoal advantage after one quarter with six goals in the second period to grab a 9-3 halftime advantage. Senior Quinn Rockwell added three goals while seniors Nolan Perla-Ward and Brian Berry added two goals each. Coby Wayne and Spencer Miner each tallied two goals to pace the Titans. In Belmont, Nick Bisconti scored six goals as Menlo School opened its PAL Bay Division season with a 19-4 victory over host Carlmont. Every field player for the Knights (8-4) scored a goal. In addition, 11 players added assists and 11 players had steals, with Alexander Carlisle leading the team with four. In Redwood City, Kyle Walden scored five goals for Priory in a 16-9 loss to host Sequoia in a PAL Ocean Division match. Mike Schembri and Will Xu each added two goals for the Panthers (0-6), who led by 3-1 after one quarter and were tied at the half, 5-5, before the Cherokees pulled away. Sacred Heart Prep, meanwhile, will be hitting the tournament road again this weekend at the S&R Sport tourney in Irvine. The Gators went 2-2 in this event last year, but will be bringing plenty of momentum this time after going 4-0 and winning the NCS vs. CCS Challenge last weekend. It wasn't the best performance he had seen from his team, but Gators' coach Brian Kreutzkamp was more than pleased with the results. "I didn't think we played great," he said, "but I'm glad we found a way to win." Sacred Heart Prep (9-2) did enough good things and did them at the right time to come away with a 7-6 victory over San Ramon Valley in the championship match Will Runkel of the 32-team event that wrapped up Saturday at St. Francis High in Mountain View. Stanford-bound Michael Holloway scored three goals, including the eventual winner with just under a minute to play, and fellow senior Will Runkel came up with 18 blocks -- including two 5-meter penalty shots. The Gators opened with an 18-2 win over Monte Vista (Danville) on Friday before beating neighborhood rival Menlo-Atherton, 10-3, in the quarterfinals. SHP reached the finals with an 11-2 win over Las Lomas in the semifinals earlier in the day as Runkel finished with 16 saves. He wound up with 53 blocks on the weekend. Elsewhere in the tournament: Palo Alto went 4-0 in the lower bracket and finished 17th following a pair of victories on Saturday. In the third round, the Vikings (9-4) defeated St. Ignatius, 11-9, behind
four goals by Bret Pinsker. In the final round, Paly held off Soquel, 7-5, as Pinsker added three more goals. He finished with 15 goals for the tourney. Menlo-Atherton lost a pair of matches on Saturday -- 12-11 to Acalanes and 15-8 to Bellarmine -- but, because the Bears won their opener on Friday, they finished eighth in the higher bracket. Menlo School finished 3-1 following an 8-6 win over Campolindo and a 6-5 triumph over Los Altos on Saturday in the consolation finals. The Knights wound up ninth in the4 upper bracket. Nick Bisconti tallied nine goals in the four matches for Menlo. N
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Axis of Light
(60 min) Algeria/France/Iran/Jordan/ Lebanon/Tunisia/UK Director: Nichola Bruce, Pia Getty Producer: Pia Getty
Through the work of eight leading artists, discover the beauty and mystery of the Middle East
Thursday, 10/25, 4:00pm (Session XXIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
A Declaration of Interdependence
(4 min) USA Director: Tiffany Shlain Producer: Sawyer Steele
People around the world declaring their interdependence in language
Thursday, 10/25, 3:50pm (Session XXIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Silver Rights Movement
(26 min) USA Director: Gail Dolgin, Robin Fryday Producer: Gail Dolgin
The colorful and courageous activist of the Civil Rights era
Sunday, 10/28, 1:15pm (Session XXXI) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Difficult Love
(48 min) South Africa Director: Peter Goldsmid, Zanele Muholi Producer: Peter Goldsmid
A highly personal take on the challenges facing black lesbians in South Africa...
Thursday, 10/25, 7:00pm (Session XXIV) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
Beneath the Blindfold
(80 min) Colombia/Iraq/Liberia/USA Directors/Producers: Kathy Berger and Ines Sommer
Four torture survivors struggle through the daunting steps of rebuilding their lives.
Wednesday, 10/24, 8:15pm (Session XX) Stanford University: Stanford Medical School (Li Ka Shing Center Building), 291Campus Dr.
Doctors of the Dark Side
(73 min) Iraq/USA Director/Producer: Martha Davis
Detainee torture documents; what has been called the greatest scandal in American medical ethics.
Wednesday, 10/24, 6:00pm (Session XX) Stanford University: Stanford Medical School (Li Ka Shing Center Building), 291Campus Dr.
Bidder 70
(73 min) USA Directors/Producers: Beth Gage, George Gage
Bidder #70 derailed the Bush Administration's widely disputed Oil and Gas lease auction....
Saturday, 10/20, 1:30pm (Session V) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Don Severo del Puente
(6 min) Bolivia/Canada Directors/Producers: Wapikoni
A compassionate look into the fate of an isolated man due to speech problems.
Sunday, 10/28, 1:00pm (Session XXXI) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium, Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Blank Canvas
(3 min) USA Director/Producer: Sarah Berkovich
With a devastating diagnosis for uterine cancer, Kim turns her baldness into a blank cavas for self-expression.
Thursday, 10/25, 3:40pm (Session XXIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr
Empress Hotel
(85 min) USA Director: Allie Light and Irving Saraf Producer: Roberta Goodman
Witness the daily struggles and rewards involved in beginning anew, creating community and possibly transforming a life.
Thursday, 10/25, 8:00pm (Session XXV) San Jose: Cardea Center For Women, 1922 Alameda
Buffalo Girls
(64 min) Thailand/USA Director: Todd Kellstein Producer: Jonathon Ker, Lanette Phillips
The wrenching story of two eight-year-old Thai girls seeking their country's national Muay Thai Boxing championship.
Tuesday, 10/23, 1:45pm (Session XV) Palo Alto: Girls Middle School, 3400 W. Bayshore Rd.
Escape
(20 min) Kenya/USA Director: Marvi Lacar Producer: Lisa Santoro
The rescue and rehabilitation of Maasai girls who have undergone female genital mutilation and early marriage.
Thursday, 10/25, 7:30pm (Session XXV) San Jose: Cardea Center For Women, 1922 Alameda
California State of Mind: The Legacy of Pat Brown
(90 min) USA Director: Sascha Rice Producer: Hilary Armstrong, Julie Mintz, Sascha Rice
How one man rose against insurmountable obstacles and shaped the future of modern California.
Sunday, 10/21, 5:40pm (Session XI) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
A Flicker in Eternity
(26 min) Japan/USA Director: Ann Kaneko, Sharon Yamato Producer: Joanne Oppenheim
The chronicles of a young boy living behind barbed wire from 1942-44
Saturday, 10/27, 11:15am (Session XXVIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
Call Me Kuchu
(87 min) Uganda/USA Director: Katherine Fairfax- Wright, Malika Zouhali- Worrall Producer: Malika Zouhali- Worrall
David Kato labors to repeal Uganda's homophobic laws
Saturday, 10/27, 8:45pm (Session XXX) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Going Up the Stairs
(52 min) Iran/France Director: Rokhsareh Ghaemmaghami
A surprisingly funny portrait of an unlikely Iranian artist who refuses to be stifled
Saturday, 10/20, 4:30pm (Session VI) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Captive Radio
(23 min) Colombia Director/Producer: Lauren Rosenfeld
Two families use a unique radio program to communicate with loved ones held hostage by rebel guerilla groups in Columbia..
Wednesday, 10/24, 8:30pm (Session XXII) San Francisco: Variety Theatre, 582 Market St.
Greedy Lying Bastards
(100 min) Nigeria/Peru/Tuvalu/Uganda/USA Director: Craig Rosebraugh Producer: Craig Rosebraugh, Patrick Gambuti Jr., Marianna Yarovskaya, Sanora Bartels, Catalina Rodriquez, Brittany Graham, Prudence Arndt, Jeremy Chilvers
A searing indictment of the influence, deceit and corruption that defines the fossil fuel industry.
Friday, 10/19, 9:30pm (Session IV) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Catherine the Great
(5 min) Israel Director/Producer: Anna Kuntsman
A personal account of human trafficking in Israel.
Monday, 10/22, 4:00pm (Session XIII) Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute For International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St.
Hazaribagh, Toxic Leather
(52 min) Bangladesh/France Director: Elise Darblay, Eric de Lavarene Producer: Veronique Mauduy
The leather-producing area of Hazaribagh has become a sanitary and environmental issue
Wednesday, 10/24, 9:10pm (Session XXII) San Francisco: Variety Theatre, 582 Market St.
Color Blind
(23 min) USA Director: Khadija Diakite Producer: Conor Fetting- Smith, Katrella N. Kindred
An intimate glimpse into the experience of families who have adopted across cultural and racial lines.
Tuesday, 10/23, 6:10pm (Session XVII) Palo Alto: Girls Middle School, 3400 W. Bayshore Rd.
Herman's House
(81 min) Canada/USA Director: Angad Bhalla Producer: Lisa Valencia-Svensson
... builds a dream in the struggle to end the cruel and unusual punishment of long-term solitary confinement.
Thursday, 10/25, 8:10pm (Session XXIV) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
The Crime of Boris Pasternak
(57 min) France/Italy/Russia/Sweden/ USA Director/Producer: Svetlana Rezvushkina
Steeped in mystery and rumors, the novel Doctor Zhivago was written and published in the west, yet denied in the former U.S.S.R.
Tuesday, 10/23, 8:00pm (Session XIX) Palo Alto: Oshman Family Jewish Community Center, 3921 Fabian Way
Imagining Emanuel
(52 min) Liberia/Norway Director: Thomas A. �stbye Producer: Kristine Ann Skaret
Residing illegally in Norway, Emanuel tries to return to his homeland without success.
Wednesday, 10/24, 6:20pm (Session XXI) San Francisco: Variety Theatre, 582 Market St.
Day in Our Bay: Voices & Views from Bristol Bay
(16 min) USA Director: Mary Katzke, Sonya Senkowsky Producer: Mary Katzke
The tradition of storytelling is shared by the voices, views and values of the Bristol Bay shareholders.
Tuesday, 10/23, 5:15pm (Session XVII) East Palo Alto: Boys & Girls Clubs, MoldawZaffaroni Clubhouse, 2031 Pulgas Ave.
In Short Supply: Small Farmers The American food system and the Struggle to Deliver Healthy does not make it easy for Food to Your Plate small farmers to get their
(13 min) USA Director/Producer: Laura Elizabeth Pohl and Brad Horn
produce to your home...
Sunday, 10/21, 3:00pm (Session X) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
A Day in the Water Life
(5 min) Canada Director/Producer: Christopher McEnroe
Follow an average guy through the day shows how much water is used everyday.
Sunday, 10/21, 1:15pm (Session IX) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Inocente
(40 min) USA Director: Andrea Fine, Sean Fine Producer: Yael Melamede, Andrea Fine, Sean Fine, Emanuel Michael, Albie Hecht
A timeless story about the transformative power of art and a snapshot of the new face of homelessness in America: Children.
Tuesday, 10/23, 3:20pm (Session XVI) East Palo Alto: Eastside Theater, 1041 Myrtle St.
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Irena Sendler: In the Name of Their Mothers
(60 min) Poland/UK/USA Director: Mary Skinner Producer: Mary Skinner, Betsy Bayha, Piotr Piwowarczyk, Richard Wormser, Jan Legnitto, Paul Mitchell, Richard Adams
A Catholic social worker smuggles aid in and orphaned children out of Warsaw's ghetto
Tuesday, 10/23, 8:00pm (Session XIX) Palo Alto: Oshman Family Jewish Community Center, 3921 Fabian Way
Rainman Goes to RocKwiz
(30 min) Australia Director: Russell Kilbey Producer: Russell Kilbey, Amy Scully, Ian Walker
A nearly blind recluse with Asperger's Syndrome breaks out of his constrictive routine with his amazing music..
Saturday, 10/20, 6:20pm (Session VII) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Journey of a Red Fridge
(54 min) Nepal/Serbia Directors/Producers: Lucian Muntean and Natasa Muntean
17 year old Hari Rai treks from village to village in the Himalayas with cargo on his back
Sunday, 10/21, 1:30pm (Session IX) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Rebels With a Cause
(75 min) USA Directors/Producers: Nancy Kelly and Kenji Yamamoto
Determination and frontier spirit saved acres of parkland from development...
Monday, 10/22, 6:45pm (Session XIV) Palo Alto: Aol Patch, 395 Page Mill Rd.
Karama Has No Walls
(26 min) Yemen/UK Director: Sara Ishaq Producer: Sara Ishaq and Hot Spot Films
The tragic events that took place on Friday of Dignity marked a turning point in Yemen's revolution.
Friday, 10/26, 8:30pm (Session XXVII) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium, Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
The Red Button
(52 min) Poland/Russia/USA Director: Ewa Pieta, Miroslaw Grubek Producer: Slawomir Grunberg, Miroslaw Grubek
The dramatic story of Stanislaw Petrov who in 1983 helped save the world from atomic war...
Thursday, 10/18, 8:30pm (Session I) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Little Mom
(17 min) USA Director/Producer: Maria Fortiz-Morse
What happens when children become caregivers for disabled family members
Tuesday, 10/23, 1:15pm (Session XV) Palo Alto: Girls Middle School, 3400 W. Bayshore Rd.
Reportero
(71 min) Mexico/USA Director/Producer: Bernardo Ruiz
Follow veteran reporters at ZETA in Tijuana, at one of the most deadly places in the world..
Friday, 10/26, 6:40pm (Session XXVI) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
The Lord Is Not On Trial Here Today
(57 min) USA Director: Jay Rosenstein Producer: Jay Rosenstein
...behind one of the most important First Amendment cases in US History that established the separation of church and state in public schools
Tuesday, 10/23, 4:10pm (Session XVI) East Palo Alto: Eastside Theater, 1041 Myrtle St.
Reunion
(72 min) Austria/Kosovo/Serbia/ Norway Director: Jon Haukeland Producer: C.R. Tredt
Through a long night of talking, Serbian and Kosovo youths grow closer as they seek a way out of the circle of oppression, and meet again 10 years later.
Saturday, 10/20, 3:00pm (Session VI) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Love Free of Die
(83 min) USA Director: Macky Alston
A man with two defining passions in direct conflict: his love for God and his partner Mark.
Friday, 10/19, 4:00pm (Session II) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Sacred Stones
(52 min) Palestine Directors/Producers: Muayad Alayan, Laila Higazi
The Palestinian stone industry is held hostage to serving Israeli construction needs...
Friday, 10/26, 5:40pm (Session XXVI) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
The Loving Story
(78 min) USA Director: Nancy Buirski Producer: Nancy Buirski and Elisabeth Haviland James
The story of the drama, history and current state of interracial marriage and tolerance in the United States.
Sunday, 10/28, 2:00pm (Session XXXI) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Scarlet Road
(70 min) Australia Director: Catherine Scott Producer: Pat Fiske
Impassioned about freedom of sexual expression, Rachel specializes in working with clients with disabilities...
Saturday, 10/27, 10:10pm (Session XXX) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Mexican Cuisine
(5 min) Mexico/Spain/USA Director: Francisco Guijarro Producer: Martin Rosete
...reflects the reality of Mexican immigrants working the kitchens of many restaurants
Thursday, 10/18, 7:00pm (Session I) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Semper Fi: Always Faithful
(76 min) USA Director: Tony Hardmon, Rachel Libert Producer: Todd Wider, Jedd Wider
A devoted marine reveals the looming environmental crisis at military sites across the country...
Saturday, 10/27, 7:15pm (Session XXX) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
The Mexian Suitcase
(90 min) France/Mexico/Spain/USA Director: Trisha Ziff Producer: 212 Berlin Films
The extraordinary recovery of 4,500 negatives taken by Robert Capa, Gerda Taro and David Seymour during the Spanish Civil War...
Saturday, 10/27, 2:15am (Session XXVIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
Sing Your Song
(105 min) USA Director: Susan Rostock Producer: Michael Cohl
An up-close look at Harry Belafone, a champion for worldwide human rights
Saturday, 10/20, 7:00pm (Session VII) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Mrs. Judo: Be Strong, Be Gentle, Be Beautiful
(66 min) Japan/USA Director/Producer: Yuriko Gamo Romer
Throwing thousands of years of tradition to the wind, Keiko Fukuda chose to follow her own destiny and become the highestranking woman in judo's history.
Saturday, 10/27, 4:00pm (Session XXIX) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Smoke Songs
(20 min) USA Director/Producer: Briar March
Born into the heart of the Navajo Nation, band members share their passion for music and socio-political messages...
Tuesday, 10/23, 5:40pm (Session XVII) East Palo Alto: Boys & Girls Clubs, MoldawZaffaroni Clubhouse, 2031 Pulgas Ave.
Not My Life
(32 min) Ghana/Nepal/Romania/ Uganda/USA Director/Producer: Robert Bilheimer
The horrifying and dangerous practices of human trafficking and modern slavery on a global scale...
Monday, 10/22, 4:10pm (Session XIII) Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute For International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St.
State of Control
(90 min) China/India/Nepal/Tibet/USA Director: Christian Johnston, Darren Mann Producer: Steven G. Kaplan
Compelling persoal stories show a never-before-seen side of the Tibet/China cyberspace struggle.
Sunday, 10/28, 3:45pm (Session XXXII) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Nothing Like Chocolate
(67 min) Grenada/Ivory Cost/USA Director/Producer: Kum-Kum Bhavnani
In the rainforests of Grenada, Mott Green seeks the solutions to the problems of a ravaged global chocolate industry.
Sunday, 10/21, 4:20pm (Session X) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Surviving Progress
(86 min) Canada/USA Director: Mathieu Roy, Harold Crooks Producers: Martin Scorsese, Daniel Louis, Denise Robert, Mark Achbar, Betsy Carson, Gerry Flahive, Silva Basmajian
Humanity's ascent is measured by the speed of progress. But what if it's spiraling us downwards towards collapse?
Sunday, 10/28, 5:30pm (Session XXXII) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Opium Brides
(52 min) Afghanistan/UK Director/Producer: Jamie Doran
Exposing the abuse of young Afghan girls by drug traffickers closely allied to the Taliban.
Sunday, 10/21, 7:30pm (Session XII) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Ten Quintillion
(10 min) Australia Director/Producer: Romilly Spiers Producer: Romilly Spiers
...A tiny garden and the creatures that rely on its existence to survive...
Tuesday, 10/23, 1:00pm (Session XV) Palo Alto: Girls Middle School, 3400 W. Bayshore Rd.
Portrait of Wally
(90 min) Austria/USA Director: Andrew Shea Producer: Andrew Shea, David D'Arcy
...Caught in a legal battle between a Nazi seized painting and the Austrian Museum..
Saturday, 10/27, 11:45am (Session XXVIII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
Thirty Years of War in the Name of God
(104 min) Afghanistan/France/Israel/ Iran/USA Director: Thomas Johnson Producer: Hind Saih
...God in modern history...
Friday, 10/19, 6:00pm (Session III) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
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This Space Available
(86 min) China/India/USA Director: Gwenaelle Gob� Producer: Marc Gob�
Billboards dominate the public space. Can we reverse this visual pollution?
Monday, 10/22, 9:15pm (Session XIV) Palo Alto: Aol Patch, 395 Page Mill Rd.
Weathering Change
(14 min) Ethiopia/Nepal/Peru Director/Producer: Nathan Golan
The struggle to care for familites, while enduring crop failures and water scarcity...
Saturday, 10/20, 1:00pm (Session V) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Through Her Eyes
(17 min) France/Italy/Jordan/USA Directors/Producers: Marta Pietrobelli, Rebecca Gerome
A Jordanian woman shares life lessons and inspires women to overcome even the greatest obstacles...
Thursday, 10/25, 7:00pm (Session XXV) San Jose: Cardea Center For Women, 1922 Alameda
The Well: Water Voices From Ethiopia
(56 min) Ethiopia/Italy Director/Director: Paolo Barberi
The Borana herders gather with their livestock around ancient wells to survive the long annual drought...
Thursday, 10/18, 7:15pm (Session I) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Tokyo Waka: A City Poem
(63 min) Japan/USA Director: Kris Samuelson Producer: John Haptas
A Buddhist priest, a gardener, a homeless woman and more than 20,000 crows in a Tokyo Waka: A City Poem
Tuesday, 10/23, 5:00pm (Session XVIII) Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute For International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St.
Where Soldiers Come From
(90 min) Afghanistan/USA Director/Producer: Heather Courtney
Enticed by a signing-bonus and college tuition support, Dominic and Cole navigate their military future until deployed to Afghanistan...
Friday, 10/26, 9:10pm (Session XXVII) Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr.
Transgenders: Pakistan's Open Secret
(54 min) Pakistan/UK Director/Producer: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
Tthe story of three transgenders, each of whom represent a different way of life in the country...
Tuesday, 10/23, 4:00pm (Session XVIII) Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute For International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St.
White and Black: Crimes of Color
(58 min) Canada/Tanzania Director: Jean-Francois M�an Producer: Greg Dummett, Louis Laverdi�re
In Tanzania corrupt healers traffic in the body parts of people with albinism...
Thursday, 10/25, 9:40pm (Session XXV) San Jose: Cardea Center For Women, 1922 Alameda
Undocumented Dreams
(15 min) USA Director/Producer: Sara Masetti
a Latino college graduate learns to move forward in life with an expired visa...
Wednesday, 10/24, 6:00pm (Session XXI) San Francisco: Variety Theatre, 582 Market St.
A Wild Idea
(27 min) Equador/USA Director/Producer: Veronica Moscoso
Ecuador's unprecedented proposal for fighting global climate change...
Friday, 10/19, 8:15pm (Session IV) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
Unravel
(14 min) India/UK Director: Meghna Gupta Producer: Meghna Gupta, Gigi Berardi
Working in a textile-recycling factory, Reshma constructs a picutre of the West using both imagination and rumors...
Tuesday, 10/23, 3:00pm (Session XVI) East Palo Alto: Eastside Theater, 1041 Myrtle St.
Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up
(82 min) Cuba/USA Director/Producer: Saul Landau
Decades of assassinations and sabotage backed by Washington and then ignored when they launched the "war against terrorism"
Saturday, 10/20, 9:15pm (Session VIII) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
We Still Live Here
(56 min) USA Director/Producer: Anne Makepeace
...Bringing a language alive again in an American Indian community...
Saturday, 10/27, 5:15pm (Session XXIX) Stanford: Annenberg Auditorium ,Cummings Art Building, 435 Lasuen Mall
Words of Witness
(68 min) Egypt/USA Director/Producer: Mai Iskander
Defying cultural norms and family expectations, Heba takes to the streets to report on Egypt in turmoil.
Sunday, 10/21, 8:30pm (Session XII) Palo Alto: Aquarius Theatre, 430 Emerson St.
PANELS 1. MONDAY October 22 Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St. 4:45 PM Panel: "Philanthropy- Filmmaking-Social Change" (FREE Admission) 2. MONDAY October 22 Palo Alto, AOL Patch, 395 Page Mill Road 8:15 PM Panel "Visual Pollution" (FREE Admission) 3. TUESDAY October 23 Stanford University: Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Encina Hall, 616 Serra St. 6:15 PM Panel "Meet Stanford Filmmakers" (FREE Admission) 4. WEDNESDAY October 24 Stanford University: Stanford Medical School (Li Ka Shing Center Building), 291Campus Dr. 7:15 PM Panel "Do We Still Need Torture?" (FREE Admission) 5. WEDNESDAY October 24 San Francisco: Variety Theatre, 582 Market St. 7:15 PM Panel "Dream Act" (FREE Admission) 6. THURSDAY October 25 Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr. 5:00 PM Panel "Arts Activism" (FREE Admission) 7. SATURDAY October 27 Stanford: Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Dr. 1:15 PM Panel "The Value of Missing Art" (FREE Admission)
TICKETS can be purchased at STANFORD TICKET OFFICE,
http://tickets.stanford.edu UNA STORE, 552 Emerson Street, Palo Alto, 650-326-3170 OR AT THE FESTIVAL Admission per film session (1.5�3 hours) $10 for general public
Tresidder Union, 650-725-2787
FESTIVAL PASS (all 11 days, 33 sessions) $150 for general public DAILY PASSES (for Stanford screenings only) Thursday�Friday $25 for general public Saturday�Sunday $35 for general public OPENING NIGHT FILMS and CEREMONY only $15 for general public OPENING NIGHT FILMS, CEREMONY & PARTY with the filmmakers--$75 FRIDAY, October 19, SATURDAY, October 20, SUNDAY, October 21 (except UNAFF & KIDS session between 1:00PM � 3:00PM) MONDAY, October 22 Palo Alto SESSIONS $10 per film session for general public TUESDAY, October 23, East Palo Alto Screenings Tickets can be purchased at the door before the screenings $10 per film session for general public WEDNESDAY, October 24, San Francisco Screenings Tickets for San Francisco screenings can be purchased at the door of the Variety Theater $10 per film session for general public THURSDAY, October 25, San Jose Screenings, Tickets can be purchased at the door before the screenings $10 per film session for general public CLOSING NIGHT FILMS & AWARD CEREMONY only $15 for general public CLOSING NIGHT FILMS & AWARD CEREMONY & PARTY $45 for general public FREE ADMISSION FOR: ALL SCREENINGS AND PANELS FOR ALL STUDENTS AND SENIORS (take this great opportunity ONLY this year in celebration of this year's theme HUMAN DIGNITY) UNAFF & Kids Program in Palo Alto, Sunday, October 21 All UNAFF PANELS (First-come, First-served at all events) Tickets and pass holders must arrive 15 minutes prior to showtime to guarantee admission. Anyone arriving less than 15 minutes prior to showtime cannot be guaranteed a seat, even with a ticket or pass. No refunds, exchanges, substitutions or replacements will be issued. For more information, please call 650-724-5544 or visit UNAFF 2012 at www.unaff.org For screening locations at Stanford, go to www.unaff.org/map.html There will be 50 FREE TICKETS for the first 50 people who send us an e-mail with the subject line "FREE TICKET" on Tuesday October 9 to freeticket@unaff.org
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